We have imaged five compact high-velocity clouds in HI with arcmin angular-
and km/s spectral-resolution using the WSRT. Supplementary total-power data,
which is fully sensitive to both the cool and warm components of HI, is
available for comparison for all the sources, albeit with angular resolutions
that vary from 3' to 36'. The fractional HI flux in compact CNM components
varies from 4% to 16% in our sample. All objects have at least one local peak
in the CNM column which exceeds about 10^19 cm^-2 when observed with arcmin
resolution. It is plausible that a peak column density of 1-2x10^19 cm^-2 is a
prerequisite for the long-term survival of these sources. One object in our
sample, CHVC120-20-443 (Davies' cloud), lies in close projected proximity to
the disk of M31. This object is characterized by exceptionally broad linewidths
in its CNM concentrations (more than 5 times greater than the median value).
These CNM concentrations lie in an arc on the edge of the source facing the M31
disk, while the diffuse HI component of this source has a position offset in
the direction of the disk. All of these attributes suggest that CHVC120-20-443
is in a different evolutionary state than most of the other CHVCs which have
been studied. Similarly broad CNM linewidths have only been detected in one
other object, CHVC111-07-466, which also lies in the Local Group barycenter
direction and has the most extreme radial velocity known. A distinct
possibility for Davies' cloud seems to be physical interaction of some type
with M31. The most likely form of this interaction might be the ram-pressure or
tidal- stripping by either one of M31's visible dwarf companions, M32 or
NGC205, or else by a dark companion with an associated HI condensation.Comment: 12 pages, 11 (low res.) png figs, accepted for pub. in A&