ΛCDM Satellites and H I Companions—the Arecibo ALFA Survey of NGC 2903
We have conducted a deep, complete H I survey, using Arecibo/Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA), of a field centered on the nearby, isolated galaxy, NGC 2903, which is similar to the Milky Way in its properties. The field size was 150 kpc X 260 kpc and the final velocity range spanned from 100 to 1133...
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creator | Irwin, Judith A Hoffman, G. Lyle Spekkens, Kristine Haynes, Martha P Giovanelli, Riccardo Linder, Suzanne M Catinella, Barbara Momjian, Emmanuel Koribalski, Bärbel S Davies, Jonathan Brinks, Elias de Blok, W. J. G Putman, Mary E van Driel, Wim |
description | We have conducted a deep, complete H I survey, using Arecibo/Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA), of a field centered on the nearby, isolated galaxy, NGC 2903, which is similar to the Milky Way in its properties. The field size was 150 kpc X 260 kpc and the final velocity range spanned from 100 to 1133 km s-1. The ALFA beams have been mapped as a function of azimuth and cleaned from each azimuth-specific cube prior to forming final cubes. The final H I data are sensitive down to an H I mass of 2 X 105 M and column density of 2 X 1017 cm-2 at the 3 sigma 2 delta V level, where sigma is the rms noise level and delta V is the velocity resolution. NGC 2903 is found to have an H I envelope that is larger than previously known, extending to at least three times the optical diameter of the galaxy. Our search for companions yields one new discovery with an H I mass of 2.6 X 106 M . The companion is 64 kpc from NGC 2903 in projection, is likely associated with a small optical galaxy of similar total stellar mass, and is dark matter dominated, with a total mass >108 M . In the region surveyed, there are now two known companions: our new discovery and a previously known system that is likely a dwarf spheroidal, lacking H I content. If H I constitutes 1% of the total mass in all possible companions, then we should have detected 230 companions, according to Lambda cold dark matter ( Lambda CDM) predictions. Consequently, if this number of dark-matter clumps are indeed present, then they contain less than 1% H I content, possibly existing as very faint dwarf spheroidals or as starless, gasless dark-matter clumps. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1088/0004-637X/692/2/1447 |
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Lyle ; Spekkens, Kristine ; Haynes, Martha P ; Giovanelli, Riccardo ; Linder, Suzanne M ; Catinella, Barbara ; Momjian, Emmanuel ; Koribalski, Bärbel S ; Davies, Jonathan ; Brinks, Elias ; de Blok, W. J. G ; Putman, Mary E ; van Driel, Wim</creator><creatorcontrib>Irwin, Judith A ; Hoffman, G. Lyle ; Spekkens, Kristine ; Haynes, Martha P ; Giovanelli, Riccardo ; Linder, Suzanne M ; Catinella, Barbara ; Momjian, Emmanuel ; Koribalski, Bärbel S ; Davies, Jonathan ; Brinks, Elias ; de Blok, W. J. G ; Putman, Mary E ; van Driel, Wim</creatorcontrib><description>We have conducted a deep, complete H I survey, using Arecibo/Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA), of a field centered on the nearby, isolated galaxy, NGC 2903, which is similar to the Milky Way in its properties. The field size was 150 kpc X 260 kpc and the final velocity range spanned from 100 to 1133 km s-1. The ALFA beams have been mapped as a function of azimuth and cleaned from each azimuth-specific cube prior to forming final cubes. The final H I data are sensitive down to an H I mass of 2 X 105 M and column density of 2 X 1017 cm-2 at the 3 sigma 2 delta V level, where sigma is the rms noise level and delta V is the velocity resolution. NGC 2903 is found to have an H I envelope that is larger than previously known, extending to at least three times the optical diameter of the galaxy. Our search for companions yields one new discovery with an H I mass of 2.6 X 106 M . The companion is 64 kpc from NGC 2903 in projection, is likely associated with a small optical galaxy of similar total stellar mass, and is dark matter dominated, with a total mass >108 M . In the region surveyed, there are now two known companions: our new discovery and a previously known system that is likely a dwarf spheroidal, lacking H I content. If H I constitutes 1% of the total mass in all possible companions, then we should have detected 230 companions, according to Lambda cold dark matter ( Lambda CDM) predictions. 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In the region surveyed, there are now two known companions: our new discovery and a previously known system that is likely a dwarf spheroidal, lacking H I content. If H I constitutes 1% of the total mass in all possible companions, then we should have detected 230 companions, according to Lambda cold dark matter ( Lambda CDM) predictions. 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The final H I data are sensitive down to an H I mass of 2 X 105 M and column density of 2 X 1017 cm-2 at the 3 sigma 2 delta V level, where sigma is the rms noise level and delta V is the velocity resolution. NGC 2903 is found to have an H I envelope that is larger than previously known, extending to at least three times the optical diameter of the galaxy. Our search for companions yields one new discovery with an H I mass of 2.6 X 106 M . The companion is 64 kpc from NGC 2903 in projection, is likely associated with a small optical galaxy of similar total stellar mass, and is dark matter dominated, with a total mass >108 M . In the region surveyed, there are now two known companions: our new discovery and a previously known system that is likely a dwarf spheroidal, lacking H I content. If H I constitutes 1% of the total mass in all possible companions, then we should have detected 230 companions, according to Lambda cold dark matter ( Lambda CDM) predictions. 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title | ΛCDM Satellites and H I Companions—the Arecibo ALFA Survey of NGC 2903 |
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