Virgo Filaments. III. The gas content of galaxies in filaments as predicted by the GAEA semi-analytic model
D. Zakharova, B. Vulcani, G. De Lucia, R. A. Finn, G. Rudnick, F., Combes, G. Castignani, F. Fontanot, P. Jablonka, L. Xie, and M. Hirschmann

TL;DR
This study investigates how the gas content of galaxies varies across different environments, using observational data and the GAEA semi-analytic model to understand environmental effects on atomic and molecular gas in galaxies.
Contribution
It compares observed and simulated galaxy gas content in filaments, clusters, and isolation, revealing environmental influences and the impact of groups within filaments on galaxy gas properties.
Findings
Galaxies in filaments have intermediate gas content between clusters and isolated galaxies.
ext{HI} is more environment-sensitive than ext{H2}.
Low-mass galaxies are more affected by environment than massive ones.
Abstract
Galaxy evolution depends on the environment in which galaxies are located. The various physical processes (ram-pressure stripping, tidal interactions, etc.) that can affect the gas content in galaxies have different efficiencies in different environments. In this work, we examine the gas (atomic \ce{HI} and molecular \ce{H2}) content of local galaxies inside and outside clusters, groups, and filaments as well as in isolation using observational and simulated data. We exploited a catalog of galaxies in the Virgo cluster(including the surrounding filaments) and compared the data against the predictions of the Galaxy Evolution and Assembly(GAEA) semi-analytic model, which has explicit prescriptions for partitioning the cold gas content in its atomic and molecular phases. We extracted from the model a mock catalog that mimics the observational biases and one not tailored to observations to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
