HI Gas and Star Formation in Major Galaxy Pairs from the FAST All-Sky HI Survey (FASHI)

Abstract

Atomic hydrogen (HI) plays a fundamental role in fueling star formation in galaxies. However, the behavior of HI gas in interacting systems, particularly galaxy pairs, remains elusive. In this work, we investigate the HI content of major mergers by cross-matching the extragalactic HI catalog from the FAST All-Sky HI Survey (FASHI) with a previously established sample of isolated galaxy pairs. With the superior sensitivity of FAST, we have constructed the largest sample of major mergers with HI detections, consisting of 440 galaxy pairs: 364 spiral-spiral (S+S) and 76 spiral-elliptical (S+E) systems. We examine the HI gas fraction (fHI), star formation rate (SFR) and HI star formation efficiency (SFEHI=SFR/M HI) for individual galaxies in pairs. The control sample is matched in both stellar mass and redshift. We find that paired galaxies, particularly those in pairs with small projected separations (dp<50\ h-1kpc), exhibit systematically lower (by 8.8\%) HI gas fractions compared to the control galaxies. The SFR is enhanced for galaxies in S+S pairs. SFEHI is 15\% higher for galaxies in S+S pairs than in the control galaxies, while spiral galaxies in S+E pairs show no significant difference in SFEHI compared to the control sample. These findings suggest that the merging process triggers efficient HI gas depletion and enhances star formation, especially in close S+S pairs. Notably, our sample includes 26 red spirals in paired systems. These galaxies exhibit HI deficiency and suppressed star formation activity compared to the isolated galaxies, indicating that interactions may affect quiescent spirals differently, potentially due to mechanisms similar to ellipticals.

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