WALLABY pilot survey: Spatially resolved gas scaling relations within the stellar discs of nearby galaxies
Seona Lee, Barbara Catinella, Tobias Westmeier, Luca Cortese, Jing Wang, Kristine Spekkens, Nathan Deg, Helga D\'enes, Ahmed Elagali, B\"arbel S. Koribalski, Karen Lee-Waddell, Chandrashekar Murugeshan, Jonghwan Rhee, Lister Staveley-Smith, O. Ivy Wong, and Benne W. Holwerda

TL;DR
This study uses WALLABY pilot data to measure how atomic hydrogen is distributed within the stellar regions of nearby galaxies, revealing correlations with galaxy properties and emphasizing the importance of spatially resolved HI observations.
Contribution
First measurement of HI mass within stellar regions for a large galaxy sample, analyzing how spatially resolved HI relates to galaxy properties and star formation.
Findings
68% of HI mass within R25, 54% within R24, with significant variation.
Higher stellar mass and redder galaxies enclose more HI within stellar regions.
Bluer galaxies have higher HI surface densities, especially within inner regions.
Abstract
The scatter in global atomic hydrogen (HI) scaling relations is partly attributed to differences in how HI and stellar properties are measured, with HI reservoirs typically extending beyond the inner regions of galaxies where star formation occurs. Using pilot observations from the WALLABY survey, we present the first measurements of HI mass enclosed within the stellar-dominated regions of galaxies for a statistical sample of 995 local gas-rich systems, investigating the factors driving its variation. We examine how global HI scaling relations change when measurements are restricted to R25 and R24 -- the isophotal radii at 25 and 24 mag arcsec in the i-band -- and explore how the fraction of HI mass and HI surface density within these radii correlate with other galaxy properties. On average, 68% of the total HI mass is enclosed within R25 and 54% within R24, though significant…
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