Abstract
We present new Very Large Array (VLA) H i spectral line imaging of five
sources discovered by the ALFALFA extragalactic survey. These targets
are drawn from a larger sample of systems that were not uniquely
identified with optical counterparts during ALFALFA processing, and as
such have unusually high H i mass to light ratios. The candidate
“Almost Dark” objects fall into four broad categories: (1)
objects with nearby H i neighbors that are likely of tidal origin; (2)
objects that appear to be part of a system of multiple H i sources, but
which may not be tidal in origin; (3) objects isolated from nearby
ALFALFA H i detections, but located near a gas-poor early type galaxy;
(4) apparently isolated sources, with no object of coincident redshift
within ˜400 kpc. Roughly 75% of the 200 objects without identified
counterparts in the α.40 database (Haynes et al. 2011) fall into
category 1 (likely tidal), and were not considered for synthesis
follow-up observations. The pilot sample presented here (AGC193953,
AGC208602, AGC208399, AGC226178, and AGC233638) contains the first five
sources observed as part of a larger effort to characterize H i sources
with no readily identifiable optical counterpart at single dish
resolution (3.‧5). These objects span a range of H i mass [7.41
<log(MHi ) <9.51] and H i mass to B-band luminosity
ratios (3 <MHi /LB <9). We compare the H i
total intensity and velocity fields to optical imaging drawn from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey and to ultraviolet imaging drawn from archival
GALEX observations. Four of the sources with uncertain or no optical
counterpart in the ALFALFA data are identified with low surface
brightness optical counterparts in Sloan Digital Sky Survey imaging when
compared with VLA H i intensity maps, and appear to be galaxies with
clear signs of ordered rotation in the H i velocity fields. Three of
these are detected in far-ultraviolet GALEX images, a likely indication
of star formation within the last few hundred Myrs. One source
(AGC208602) is likely tidal in nature, associated with the NGC 3370
group. Consistent with previous efforts, we find no “dark
galaxies” in this limited sample. However, the present
observations do reveal complex sources with suppressed star formation,
highlighting both the observational difficulties and the necessity of
synthesis follow-up observations to understand these extreme objects.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 72-87 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
| Journal | The Astronomical Journal |
| Volume | 149 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Feb-2015 |
Keywords
- galaxies: dwarf
- galaxies: evolution
- galaxies: individual: AGC193953
- AGC208602
- AGC208399
- AGC226178
- AGC233638
- galaxies: irregular