Back to Search Start Over

Anomalous gas in ESO 149-G003: A MeerKAT-16 View

Authors :
Józsa, Gyula I. G.
Thorat, Kshitij
Kamphuis, Peter
Sebokolodi, Lerato
Maina, Eric K.
Wang, Jing
Pieterse, Daniëlle L. A.
Groot, Paul
Ramaila, Athanaseus J. T.
Serra, Paolo
Andati, Lexy A. L.
de Blok, W. J. G.
Hugo, Benjamin V.
Kleiner, Dane
Maccagni, Filippo M.
Makhathini, Sphesihle
Molnár, Dániel Cs.
Ramatsoku, Mpati
Smirnov, Oleg M.
Bloemen, Steven
Paterson, Kerry
Vreeswijk, Paul
McBride, Vanessa
Klein-Wolt, Marc
Woudt, Patrick
Körding, Elmar
Poole, Rudolf Le
Goedhart, Sharmila
Passmoor, Sean S.
Serylak, Maciej
Dettmar, Ralf-Jürgen
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

ESO 149-G003 is a close-by, isolated dwarf irregular galaxy. Previous observations with the ATCA indicated the presence of anomalous neutral hydrogen (HI) deviating from the kinematics of a regularly rotating disc. We conducted follow-up observations with the MeerKAT radio telescope during the 16-dish Early Science programme as well as with the MeerLICHT optical telescope. Our more sensitive radio observations confirm the presence of anomalous gas in ESO 149-G003, and further confirm the formerly tentative detection of an extraplanar HI component in the galaxy. Employing a simple tilted-ring model, in which the kinematics is determined with only four parameters but including morphological asymmetries, we reproduce the galaxy's morphology, which shows a high degree of asymmetry. By comparing our model with the observed HI, we find that in our model we cannot account for a significant (but not dominant) fraction of the gas. From the differences between our model and the observed data cube we estimate that at least 7%-8% of the HI in the galaxy exhibits anomalous kinematics, while we estimate a minimum mass fraction of less than 1% for the morphologically confirmed extraplanar component. We investigate a number of global scaling relations and find that, besides being gas-dominated with a neutral gas-to-stellar mass ratio of 1.7, the galaxy does not show any obvious global peculiarities. Given its isolation, as confirmed by optical observations, we conclude that the galaxy is likely currently acquiring neutral gas. It is either re-accreting gas expelled from the galaxy or accreting pristine intergalactic material.<br />Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, MNRAS, Accepted 2020 December 2, in original form 2019 September 18

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2012.01751
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa3770