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HOPCAT, a complete Southern Sky Neutral Hydrogen-Optical Galaxy Catalogue
and the Star Formation Rate-Density Relation.

Marianne T. Doyle
School of Physical Sciences
University of Queensland
November, 2006


Abstract

We investigate the star formation rate (SFR)-density relation using a neutral hydrogen (HI) galaxy sample. The SFR-density relation is the observation that the SFR decreases with increasing local galaxy density. We determine which of the two main alternatives explains what causes the cessation of star formation in regions with high galaxy density. Is it that fewer star forming HI galaxies are present in galaxy dense regions or are galaxies capable of star formation present but some physical process is suppressing their star formation?  We use the HI Parkes All Sky survey catalogue (HICAT) and find the optical counterparts for the HI detections.  We produce the HICAT Optical Catalogue, HOPCAT which contains 4315 HI detections.  Of these we find optical counterparts for 3618 (84 per cent) galaxies. For 481 (11 per cent), multiple galaxies are present but no single optical counterpart can be chosen and 216 (5 per cent) have no obvious optical galaxy present.  We conduct a search for possible isolated dark galaxies in HOPCAT and find no isolated optically dark galaxies within the limits of the HI Parkes All Sky survey. A compact disk copy of HOPCAT is provided with this thesis.

The SFR-density relation is investigated using the optically matched HOPCAT galaxies. We use these galaxies along with two background catalogues, one optical and one k-band, to calculate the local surface density, Σ10 Sigma10.  To calculate the SFRs we use infrared (IR) and radio flux.  We have four data sets: two with densities calculated using the optical background catalogue each with IR and radio SFRs, and two with densities calculated using the K-band background catalogue with IR and radio SFRs.

Using the largest HI detected data set of the whole southern sky we investigate the relationship between HI mass and the SFR and find that, for nearby (velocity < 10000 km s -1) HI galaxies, we find a strong correlation. We find a larger population of HI galaxies compared to optical galaxies for Sigma10 < 2 galaxies Mpc-2. We also find the number of HI galaxies decreases by 50 per cent over a Sigma10 range between 0 and 11 galaxies Mpc-2.  For the same density range the optical galaxy population only decreases by 2.9 per cent. We do not find a change in the HI content of our galaxy sample with increasing local galaxy density. 

For HI galaxies (1000 < velocity < 6000 kms-1 there is no significant change in the star formation rate or the efficiency of star formation with respect to local surface density. We find that the SFR-density relation as reported in previous studies can be explained by their optical data sample.  Their samples contain galaxies detected by their stellar population and not their star formation potential.  The SFR is less in regions of high local galaxy density because the galaxies present in these regions are predominately elliptical galaxies that display little or no star formation.  This density/morphology mix is confirmed by the morphology-density relation.

For the first time we can explain the reasons behind the SFR-density relation and we find that the decrease in the SFR with increasing local galaxy density is explained by a decrease in the population of HI star forming galaxies and not due to the suppression of star formation in the HI galaxies.

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Created : July 11th 2005 | Last Updated : December 11th  2006 | VERSION : 1.0