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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2004

The HIPASS catalogue - I. Data presentation

Martin Meyer; M. A. Zwaan; R. L. Webster; Lister Staveley-Smith; Emma V. Ryan-Weber; Michael J. Drinkwater; D. G. Barnes; Matt Howlett; Virginia A. Kilborn; J. Stevens; Meryl Waugh; Michael Pierce; R. Bhathal; W. J. G. de Blok; Michael John Disney; Ron Ekers; Kenneth C. Freeman; Diego Garcia; Brad K. Gibson; J. Harnett; P. A. Henning; Helmut Jerjen; M. J. Kesteven; Patricia M. Knezek; Baerbel Koribalski; S. Mader; M. Marquarding; Robert F. Minchin; J. O'Brien; Tom Oosterloo

The H I Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS) catalogue forms the largest uniform catalogue of H I sources compiled to date, with 4315 sources identified purely by their H I content. The catalogue data comprise the southern region δ< + 2 ◦ of HIPASS, the first blind H I survey to cover the entire southern sky. The rms noise for this survey is 13 mJy beam −1 and the velocity range is −1280 to 12 700 km s −1 . Data search, verification and parametrization methods are discussed along with a description of measured quantities. Full catalogue data are made available to the astronomical community including positions, velocities, velocity widths, integrated fluxes and peak flux densities. Also available are on-sky moment maps, position‐velocity moment maps and spectra of catalogue sources. A number of local large-scale features are observed in the space distribution of sources, including the super-Galactic plane and the Local Void. Notably, large-scale structure is seen at low Galactic latitudes, a region normally obscured at optical wavelengths.


The Astronomical Journal | 2003

The 1000 brightest hipass galaxies: The HI mass function and Omega(HI)

M. A. Zwaan; Lister Staveley-Smith; Baerbel Koribalski; P. A. Henning; Virginia A. Kilborn; Stuart D. Ryder; David G. Barnes; R. Bhathal; P. J. Boyce; W. J. G. de Blok; M. J. Disney; Michael J. Drinkwater; Paul Ekert; Kenneth C. Freeman; B. K. Gibson; Anne J. Green; R. F. Haynes; Helmut Jerjen; S. Juraszek; M. J. Kesteven; Patricia M. Knezek; R. C. Kraan-Korteweg; S. Mader; M. Marquarding; Martin Meyer; Robert F. Minchin; Jeremy R. Mould; J. O'Brien; Tom Oosterloo; R N Price

We present a new, accurate measurement of the H I mass function of galaxies from the HIPASS Bright Galaxy Catalog, a sample of 1000 galaxies with the highest H I peak flux densities in the southern (delta<0D) hemisphere. This sample spans nearly 4 orders of magnitude in H I mass [ log (M-H I/M-O) + 2 log h(75)=6.8-10.6] and is the largest sample of H I-selected galaxies to date. We develop a bivariate maximum likelihood technique to measure the space density of galaxies and show that this is a robust method, insensitive to the effects of large-scale structure. The resulting H I mass function can be fitted satisfactorily with a Schechter function with faint-end slope α=-1.30. This slope is found to be dependent on morphological type, with late-type galaxies giving steeper slopes. We extensively test various effects that potentially bias the determination of the H I mass function, including peculiar motions of galaxies, large-scale structure, selection bias, and inclination effects, and we quantify these biases. The large sample of galaxies enables an accurate measurement of the cosmological mass density of neutral gas: U(H) I=(3.8P0.6)x10(-4) h(75)(-1). Low surface brightness galaxies contribute only similar to15% to this value, consistent with previous findings.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The Northern HIPASS catalogue – data presentation, completeness and reliability measures

O. I. Wong; Emma V. Ryan-Weber; D. A. Garcia-Appadoo; R. L. Webster; Lister Staveley-Smith; M. A. Zwaan; Michael J. Meyer; D. G. Barnes; Virginia A. Kilborn; Ragbir Bhathal; W. J. G. de Blok; Michael John Disney; Marianne T. Doyle; Michael J. Drinkwater; Ron Ekers; Kenneth C. Freeman; Brad K. Gibson; Sebastian Gurovich; J. Harnett; P. A. Henning; Helmut Jerjen; M. J. Kesteven; Patricia M. Knezek; B. Koribalski; S. Mader; M. Marquarding; Robert F. Minchin; J. O'Brien; Mary E. Putman; Stuart D. Ryder

The Northern HIPASS catalogue (NHICAT) is the northern extension of the HIPASS catalogue, HICAT. This extension adds the sky area between the declination (Dec.) range of +2 degrees 300 km s(-1). Sources with -300 < nu(hel) < 300 km s(-1) were excluded to avoid contamination by Galactic emission. In total, the entire HIPASS survey has found 5317 galaxies identified purely by their HI content. The full galaxy catalogue is publicly available at http://hipass.aus-vo.org.


Scopus | 2003

The 1000 brightest HIPASS galaxies: The H I mass function and ω

M. A. Zwaan; David G. Barnes; Martin Meyer; Emma V. Ryan-Weber; Meryl Waugh; R. L. Webster; Lister Staveley-Smith; B. Koribalski; R. D. Ekers; R. F. Haynes; M. J. Kesteven; S. Mader; M. Marquarding; A. E. Wright; P. A. Henning; R. M. Price; Virginia A. Kilborn; Stuart D. Ryder; R. Bhathal; F. Stootman; P. J. Boyce; De Blok Wjg; M. J. Disney; Robert F. Minchin; Michael J. Drinkwater; Kenneth C. Freeman; Helmut Jerjen; J. O'Brien; B Warren; B. K. Gibson

We present a new, accurate measurement of the H I mass function of galaxies from the HIPASS Bright Galaxy Catalog, a sample of 1000 galaxies with the highest H I peak flux densities in the southern (delta<0D) hemisphere. This sample spans nearly 4 orders of magnitude in H I mass [ log (M-H I/M-O) + 2 log h(75)=6.8-10.6] and is the largest sample of H I-selected galaxies to date. We develop a bivariate maximum likelihood technique to measure the space density of galaxies and show that this is a robust method, insensitive to the effects of large-scale structure. The resulting H I mass function can be fitted satisfactorily with a Schechter function with faint-end slope α=-1.30. This slope is found to be dependent on morphological type, with late-type galaxies giving steeper slopes. We extensively test various effects that potentially bias the determination of the H I mass function, including peculiar motions of galaxies, large-scale structure, selection bias, and inclination effects, and we quantify these biases. The large sample of galaxies enables an accurate measurement of the cosmological mass density of neutral gas: U(H) I=(3.8P0.6)x10(-4) h(75)(-1). Low surface brightness galaxies contribute only similar to15% to this value, consistent with previous findings.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

New Galaxies Discovered in the First Blind H I Survey of the Centaurus A Group

G. D. Banks; M. J. Disney; Patricia Marie Knezek; Helmut Jerjen; D. G. Barnes; R. Bhatal; W. J. G. de Blok; P. J. Boyce; R. D. Ekers; Kenneth C. Freeman; Brad K. Gibson; P. A. Henning; V. Kilborn; B. Koribalski; R. C. Kraan-Korteweg; David F. Malin; Robert F. Minchin; Jeremy R. Mould; Tom Oosterloo; R. M. Price; M. E. Putman; Stuart D. Ryder; Elaine M. Sadler; Lister Staveley-Smith; I. Stewart; F. Stootman; R. A. Vaile; R. L. Webster; A. E. Wright

We have commenced a 21 cm survey of the entire southern sky (δ -13.0), low surface brightness dwarf galaxies with H I profile line-widths suggestive of dynamics dominated by dark matter. The new group members add approximately 6% to the H I mass of the group and 4% to its light. The H I mass function, derived from all the known group galaxies in the interval 107 M☉ < M < 109 M☉, has a faint-end slope of 1.30 ± 0.15, allowing us to rule out a slope of 1.7 at 95% confidence. Even if the number in the lowest mass bin is increased by 50%, the slope only increases to 1.45 ± 0.15.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2004

The HIPASS catalogue - II. completeness, reliability and parameter accuracy

M. A. Zwaan; Martin Meyer; R. L. Webster; Lister Staveley-Smith; Michael J. Drinkwater; D. G. Barnes; Ragbir Bhathal; W. J. G. de Blok; M. J. Disney; Ron Ekers; Kenneth C. Freeman; Diego Garcia; B. K. Gibson; J. Harnett; P. A. Henning; M. Howlett; Helmut Jerjen; M. J. Kesteven; Virginia A. Kilborn; Patricia M. Knezek; B. Koribalski; S. Mader; M. Marquarding; Robert F. Minchin; J. O'Brien; Tom Oosterloo; Michael Pierce; R. M. Price; Mary E. Putman; Emma V. Ryan-Weber

The H I Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) is a blind extragalactic H I 21-cm emission-line survey covering the whole southern sky from declination -90degrees to +25degrees. The HIPASS catalogue (HICAT), containing 4315 H I-selected galaxies from the region south of declination +2degrees, is presented in Meyer et al. (Paper I). This paper describes in detail the completeness and reliability of HICAT, which are calculated from the recovery rate of synthetic sources and follow-up observations, respectively. HICAT is found to be 99 per cent complete at a peak flux of 84 mJy and an integrated flux of 9.4 Jy km. s(-1). The overall reliability is 95 per cent, but rises to 99 per cent for sources with peak fluxes >58 mJy or integrated flux >8.2 Jy km s(-1). Expressions are derived for the uncertainties on the most important HICAT parameters: peak flux, integrated flux, velocity width and recessional velocity. The errors on HICAT parameters are dominated by the noise in the HIPASS data, rather than by the parametrization procedure.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey: precursor observations of the NGC 628 group

Robbie Richard Auld; Robert F. Minchin; Jonathan Ivor Davies; Barbara Catinella; W. van Driel; P. A. Henning; S. Linder; Emmanuel Momjian; Erik Muller; K. O'Neil; S. Sabatini; Stephen E. Schneider; Gregory David Bothun; Luca Cortese; M. J. Disney; G. L. Hoffman; Mary E. Putman; Jessica L. Rosenberg; M. Baes; W. J. G. de Blok; A. Boselli; Elias Brinks; Noah Brosch; Judith A. Irwin; I. D. Karachentsev; Virginia A. Kilborn; B. Koribalski; K. Spekkens

The Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey (AGES) is one of several HI surveys utilising the new Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA) fitted to the 305m radio telescope at Arecibo. The survey is specifically designed to investigate various galactic environments to higher sensitivity, higher velocity resolution and higher spatial resolution than previous fully sampled, 21 cm multibeam surveys. The emphasis is on making detailed observations of nearby objects although the large system bandwidth (100 MHz) will allow us to quantify the HI properties over a large instantaneous velocity range. In this paper we describe the survey and its goals and present the results from the precursor observations of a 5 degree x 1 degree region containing the nearby (~10 Mpc) NGC 628 group. We have detected all the group galaxies in the region including the low mass (M{HI}~10^7Mo) dwarf, dw0137+1541 (Briggs, 1986). The fluxes and velocities for these galaxies compare well with previously published data. There is no intra-group neutral gas detected down to a limiting column density of 2x10^{18}cm^{-2}. In addition to the group galaxies we have detected 22 galaxies beyond the NGC 628 group, 9 of which are previously uncatalogued.(Abridged)


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

HIPASS detection of an intergalactic gas cloud in the NGC 2442 group

Stuart D. Ryder; B. Koribalski; Lister Staveley-Smith; V. Kilborn; David F. Malin; G. D. Banks; David G. Barnes; R. Bhatal; W. J. G. de Blok; P. J. Boyce; M. J. Disney; Michael J. Drinkwater; R. D. Ekers; Kenneth C. Freeman; B. K. Gibson; P. A. Henning; Helmut Jerjen; Patricia M. Knezek; M. Marquarding; Robert F. Minchin; Jeremy R. Mould; Tom Oosterloo; R. M. Price; M. E. Putman; Elaine M. Sadler; I. M. Stewart; F. Stootman; R. L. Webster; A. E. Wright

We report the discovery from the H I Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS) of a gas cloud associated with the asymmetric spiral galaxy NGC 2442. This object, designated HIPASS J0731-69, contains similar to 10(9) M-. of H I, or nearly one-third as much atomic gas as NGC 2442 itself. No optical counterpart to any part of HIPASS J0731-69 has yet been identified, consistent with the gas being diffuse and its streamlike kinematics. If the gas in HIPASS J0731-69 was once part of NGC 2442, then it was most likely a fairly recent tidal encounter with a moderately massive companion that tore it loose, although the possibility of ram-pressure stripping cannot be ruled out. This discovery highlights the potential of the HIPASS data for yielding new clues to the nature of some of the best-known galaxies in the local universe.


The Astronomical Journal | 2000

H I-bright Galaxies in the Southern Zone of Avoidance

P. A. Henning; Lister Staveley-Smith; R. D. Ekers; Anne J. Green; R. F. Haynes; S. Juraszek; M. J. Kesteven; B. Koribalski; R. C. Kraan-Korteweg; R. M. Price; Elaine M. Sadler; A. Schröder

A blind survey for H I–bright galaxies in the southern zone of avoidance (212° ≤ l ≤ 36°, |b| ≤ 5°) has been made with the 21 cm multibeam receiver on the Parkes 64 m radio telescope. The survey, sensitive to normal spiral galaxies to a distance of ~40 Mpc and more nearby dwarfs, detected 110 galaxies. Of these, 67 have no counterparts cataloged in the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database. In general, the uncataloged galaxies lie behind thicker obscuration than do the cataloged objects. All the newly discovered galaxies have H I flux integrals that are more than an order of magnitude lower than those of the Circinus galaxy. The survey recovers the Puppis Cluster and foreground group, and the Local Void remains empty. The H I mass function derived for the sample is satisfactorily fitted by a Schechter function with parameters α = 1.51 ± 0.12, Φ* = 0.006 ± 0.003, and log M* = 9.7 ± 0.10.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

A Pilot for a Very Large Array H I Deep Field

Ximena Fernández; J. H. van Gorkom; Kelley M. Hess; D. J. Pisano; K. Kreckel; Emmanuel Momjian; Attila Popping; Tom Oosterloo; Laura Chomiuk; Marc Verheijen; P. A. Henning; David Schiminovich; Matthew A. Bershady; Eric M. Wilcots; N. Z. Scoville

High-resolution 21-cm HI deep fields provide spatially and kinematically resolved images of neutral hydrogen at different redshifts, which are key to understanding galaxy evolution across cosmic time and testing predictions of cosmological simulations. Here we present results from a pilot for an HI deep field done with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA). We take advantage of the newly expanded capabilities of the telescope to probe the redshift interval 0 < z < 0.193 in one observation. We observe the COSMOS field for 50 hours, which contains 413 galaxies with optical spectroscopic redshifts in the imaged field of 34′ × 34′ and the observed redshift interval. We have detected neutral hydrogen gas in 33 galaxies in different environments spanning the probed redshift range, including three without a previously known spectroscopic redshift. The detections have a range of HI and stellar masses, indicating the diversity of galaxies we are probing. We discuss the observations, data reduction, results and highlight interesting detections. We find that the VLA’s B-array is the ideal configuration for HI deep fields since its long spacings mitigate RFI. This pilot shows that the VLA is ready to carry out such a survey, and serves as a test for future HI deep fields planned with other SKA pathfinders.

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Lister Staveley-Smith

University of Western Australia

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B. Koribalski

Australia Telescope National Facility

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Helmut Jerjen

Australian National University

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Kenneth C. Freeman

Australian National University

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R. D. Ekers

Australia Telescope National Facility

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M. J. Kesteven

Australia Telescope National Facility

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