TY - JOUR
T1 - The Enigmatic (Almost) Dark Galaxy Coma P
T2 - The Atomic Interstellar Medium
AU - Ball, Catherine
AU - Cannon, John M.
AU - Leisman, Lukas
AU - Adams, Elizabeth A.K.
AU - Haynes, Martha P.
AU - Józsa, Gyula I.G.
AU - McQuinn, Kristen B.W.
AU - Salzer, John J.
AU - Brunker, Samantha
AU - Giovanelli, Riccardo
AU - Hallenbeck, Gregory
AU - Janesh, William
AU - Janowiecki, Steven
AU - Jones, Michael G.
AU - Rhode, Katherine L.
PY - 2018/2/1
Y1 - 2018/2/1
N2 - We present new high-resolution H i spectral line imaging of Coma P, the brightest H i source in the system HI 1232+20. This galaxy with extremely low surface brightness was first identified in the ALFALFA survey as an "(Almost) Dark" object: a clearly extragalactic H i source with no obvious optical counterpart in existing optical survey data (although faint ultraviolet emission was detected in archival GALEX imaging). Using a combination of data from the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope and the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, we investigate the H i morphology and kinematics at a variety of physical scales. The H i morphology is irregular, reaching only moderate maxima in mass surface density (peak pc-2). Gas of lower surface brightness extends to large radial distances, with the H i diameter measured at 4.0 ±0.2 kpc inside the pc-2 level. We quantify the relationships between mass surface density of H i gas and star formation on timescales of ∼100-200 Myr as traced by GALEX far-ultraviolet emission. While Coma P has regions of dense H i gas reaching the cm-2 level typically associated with ongoing star formation, it lacks massive star formation as traced by Hα emission. The H i kinematics are extremely complex: a simple model of a rotating disk cannot describe the H i gas in Coma P. Using spatially resolved position-velocity analysis we identify two nearly perpendicular axes of projected rotation that we interpret as either the collision of two H i disks or a significant infall event. Similarly, three-dimensional modeling of the H i dynamics provides a best fit with two H i components. Coma P is just consistent (within 3σ) with the known scaling relation. It is either too large for its H i mass, has too low an H i mass for its H i size, or the two H i components artificially extend its H i size. Coma P lies within the empirical scatter at the faint end of the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation, although the complexity of the H i dynamics complicates the interpretation. Along with its large ratio of H i to stellar mass, the collective H i characteristics of Coma P make it unusual among known galaxies in the nearby universe.
AB - We present new high-resolution H i spectral line imaging of Coma P, the brightest H i source in the system HI 1232+20. This galaxy with extremely low surface brightness was first identified in the ALFALFA survey as an "(Almost) Dark" object: a clearly extragalactic H i source with no obvious optical counterpart in existing optical survey data (although faint ultraviolet emission was detected in archival GALEX imaging). Using a combination of data from the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope and the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, we investigate the H i morphology and kinematics at a variety of physical scales. The H i morphology is irregular, reaching only moderate maxima in mass surface density (peak pc-2). Gas of lower surface brightness extends to large radial distances, with the H i diameter measured at 4.0 ±0.2 kpc inside the pc-2 level. We quantify the relationships between mass surface density of H i gas and star formation on timescales of ∼100-200 Myr as traced by GALEX far-ultraviolet emission. While Coma P has regions of dense H i gas reaching the cm-2 level typically associated with ongoing star formation, it lacks massive star formation as traced by Hα emission. The H i kinematics are extremely complex: a simple model of a rotating disk cannot describe the H i gas in Coma P. Using spatially resolved position-velocity analysis we identify two nearly perpendicular axes of projected rotation that we interpret as either the collision of two H i disks or a significant infall event. Similarly, three-dimensional modeling of the H i dynamics provides a best fit with two H i components. Coma P is just consistent (within 3σ) with the known scaling relation. It is either too large for its H i mass, has too low an H i mass for its H i size, or the two H i components artificially extend its H i size. Coma P lies within the empirical scatter at the faint end of the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation, although the complexity of the H i dynamics complicates the interpretation. Along with its large ratio of H i to stellar mass, the collective H i characteristics of Coma P make it unusual among known galaxies in the nearby universe.
KW - galaxies: dwarf
KW - galaxies: evolution
KW - galaxies: individual (Coma P, AGC 229385)
KW - galaxies: irregular
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042104711&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3847/1538-3881/aaa156
DO - 10.3847/1538-3881/aaa156
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85042104711
SN - 0004-6256
VL - 155
JO - The Astronomical Journal
JF - The Astronomical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 65
ER -