Unveiling the nature and fate of the almost-dark cloud AGC 226178 through HI mapping
Yu-Zhu Sun, Hong-Xin Zhang, Elias Brinks, Rory Smith, Fujia Li, Minsu Kim, Se-Heon Oh, Zesen Lin, Jaebeom Kim, Weibin Sun, Tie Li, Patrick C\^ot\'e, Alessandro Boselli, Lijun Chen, Pierre-Alain Duc, Sanjaya Paudel, Matthew A. Taylor, Kaixiang Wang, Enci Wang, Lanyue Zhang

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality HI mapping from FAST and VLA to analyze the almost dark HI cloud AGC 226178, revealing its turbulent, unbound nature and likely disintegration outside the Virgo cluster environment.
Contribution
It provides the first combined high-resolution HI analysis of AGC 226178, demonstrating its unbound, disintegrating state and challenging previous assumptions about its origin and stability.
Findings
AGC 226178 is an unbound, free-floating HI cloud.
The cloud shows signs of ongoing disintegration.
It is likely located outside the Virgo cluster environment.
Abstract
The origin of extragalactic, almost dark HI clouds with extreme gas-to-stellar mass ratios remains poorly understood. We investigate the nature and fate of the "almost dark" cloud AGC 226178, projected within the Virgo cluster, with an HI-to-stellar mass ratio of ~1000. We present deep single-dish HI mapping from the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), complemented by high-resolution interferometric data from the Very Large Array (VLA), as part of the Atomic gas in Virgo Interacting Dwarf galaxies (AVID) project. These observations provide the highest-quality HI analysis to date of such a cloud, combining resolution and sensitivity. FAST data reveal a short, low-velocity tail toward the dwarf galaxy VCC 2034, previously proposed as a possible origin for AGC 226178. However, VCC 2034 shows a line-of-sight asymmetric HI feature and cometary morphology indicating a…
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