On the HI Content of MaNGA Major Merger Pairs

Abstract

The role of HI content in galaxy interactions is still under debate. To study the HI content of galaxy pairs at different merging stages, we compile a sample of 66 major-merger galaxy pairs and 433 control galaxies from the SDSS-IV MaNGA IFU survey. In this study, we adopt kinematic asymmetry as a new effective indicator to describe the merging stage of galaxy pairs. With archival data from the HI-MaNGA survey and new observations from the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST), we investigate the differences in HI gas fraction (fHI), star formation rate (SFR), and HI star formation efficiency ( SFEHI) between the pair and control samples. Our results suggest that the HI gas fraction of major-merger pairs on average is marginally decreased by 15\% relative to isolated galaxies, implying mild HI depletion during galaxy interactions. Compared to isolated galaxies, pre-passage paired galaxies have similar fHI, SFR and SFEHI, while pairs during pericentric passage have weakly decreased fHI (-0.100.05 dex), significantly enhanced SFR (0.420.11 dex) and SFEHI (0.480.12 dex). When approaching the apocenter, paired galaxies show marginally decreased fHI (-0.050.04 dex), comparable SFR (0.040.06 dex) and SFEHI (0.080.08 dex). We propose the marginally detected HI depletion may originate from the gas consumption in fuelling the enhanced H2 reservoir of galaxy pairs. In addition, new FAST observations also reveal an HI absorber (NHI 4.7 × 1021 cm-2), which may suggest gas infalling and the triggering of AGN activity.

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