Detection of HI in distant galaxies using spectral stacking
Abstract
Using the Parkes radio telescope, we study the 21cm neutral hydrogen (HI) properties of a sample of galaxies with redshifts z<0.13 extracted from the optical 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS). Galaxies at 0.04<z<0.13 are studied using new Parkes observations of a 42deg2 field near the South Galactic Pole (SGP). A spectral stacking analysis of the 3,277 2dFGRS objects within this field results in a convincing 12sigma detection. For the low-redshift sample at 0<z<0.04, we use the 15,093 2dFGRS galaxies observed by the HI Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS) and find a 31sigma stacked detection. We measure average HI masses of (6.93 +/- 0.17)*109 h-2 Msun and (1.48 +/- 0.03)*109 h-2 Msun for the SGP and HIPASS samples, respectively. Accounting for source confusion and sample bias, we find a cosmic HI mass density of OmegaHI=(3.19-0.59 +0.43)*10-4 h-1 for the SGP sample and (2.82-0.59+0.30)*10-4 h-1 for the HIPASS sample. This suggests no (12 +/- 23%) evolution in the cosmic HI density over the last ~1h-1 Gyr. Due to the very large effective volumes, cosmic variance in our determination of OmegaHI is considerably lower than previous estimates. Our stacking analysis reproduces and quantifies the expected trends in the HI mass and mass-to-light ratio of galaxies with redshift, luminosity and colour.