7 research outputs found
The Large Scale Distribution of Neutral Hydrogen in the Fornax Region
Using HIPASS data, we have searched for HI in a ~25x25 sq.deg. region centred
on the Fornax cluster. Within a velocity search range of 300 - 3700 km/s and a
lower flux limit of ~40 mJy, 110 galaxies with HI emission were detected, one
of which is previously uncatalogued. None of the detections has early-type
morphology. Previously unknown velocities for 14 galaxies have been determined,
with a further 4 velocity measurements being significantly dissimilar to
published values. Identification of an optical counterpart is relatively
unambiguous for more than ~90% of our HI galaxies. The galaxies appear to be
embedded in a sheet at the cluster velocity which extends for more than 30 deg
across the search area. At the nominal cluster distance of ~20 Mpc, this
corresponds to an elongated structure more than 10 Mpc in extent. A velocity
gradient across the structure is detected, with radial velocities increasing by
\~500 km/s from SE to NW. The clustering of galaxies evident in optical surveys
is only weakly suggested in the spatial distribution of our HI detections. Our
results suggest a considerable deficit of HI-rich galaxies in the centre of the
cluster. However, relative to the field, there is a 3(+/-1)-fold excess of
HI-rich galaxies in the outer parts of the cluster where galaxies may be
infalling towards the cluster for the first time.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, 110 HI spectra. To be published in MNRA
The HIPASS Catalogue - II. Completeness, Reliability, and Parameter Accuracy
The HI Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) is a blind extragalactic HI 21-cm
emission line survey covering the whole southern sky from declination -90 to
+25. The HIPASS catalogue (HICAT), containing 4315 HI-selected galaxies from
the region south of declination +2, is presented in Meyer et al. (2004a, 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. 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. 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.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 12 pages, 11 figures. Paper with
higher resolution figures can be downloaded from http://hipass.aus-vo.or
The Northern HIPASS catalogue - Data presentation, completeness and reliability measures
The Northern HIPASS catalogue (NHICAT) is the northern extension of the
HIPASS catalogue, HICAT (Meyer et al. 2004). This extension adds the sky area
between the declination range of +2 deg < dec. < +25.5 deg to HICAT's
declination range of -90 deg < dec. < +2 deg. HIPASS is a blind HI survey using
the Parkes Radio Telescope covering 71% of the sky (including this northern
extension) and a heliocentric velocity range of -1,280 km/s to 12,700 km/s .
The entire Virgo Cluster region has been observed in the Northern HIPASS. The
galaxy catalogue, NHICAT, contains 1002 sources with v_hel > 300 km/s . Sources
with -300 km/s < v_hel < 300 km/s 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 .Comment: 12 pages, accepted for publication by MNRA
Near-infrared properties of NOIRCAT
The Northern HIPASS Optical/Infrared Catalogue (NOIRCAT) consists of optical/near-infrared identification of the sources found in the Northern HIPASS Catalogue, NHICAT. NHICAT and NOIRCAT have sampled the entire region of sky between the declinations of +2° and +25.5°. Of the 1002 sources in NHICAT, 655 have previously-observed optical counterparts with matching optical velocities. Here, we present the optical/near-infrared properties of these matches
The Northern HIPASS Optical/IR Catalogue (NOIRCAT)
We present the Northern HIPASS Optical/Infrared Catalogue (NOIRCAT), an optical/near-infrared counterpart catalogue for the Northern HIPASS catalogue (NHICAT). Of the 1002 sources in NHICAT, 655 (66%) have optical counterparts with matching optical velocities. A further 87 sources have optical counterparts with matching velocities from previous radio emission line surveys. Assuming a dark galaxy to be an isolated HI source with no detectable stars, no candidate dark galaxies have been confirmed