A Blind Search for Neutral Hydrogen
Abstract
Measurements of neutral hydrogen (HI) are important in our understanding of the universe. Hydrogen within galaxies passes through a neutral phase as it cools and collapses into stars. The reservoir and distribution of HI associated with galaxies is therefore closely tied to how galaxies grow and evolve. Unfortunately, most of our observational information on HI is limited to the local universe, impeding our ability to see how the HI properties of galaxies change over time. Using the newly upgraded Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope, located in Socorro, New Mexico, we are working on a far-reaching survey of HI gas around galaxies: The COSMOS HI Large Extragalactic Survey (CHILES). For the first time, we can search for HI over one-third of the age of the universe in a single observation. This survey will provide HI mass, morphology, and kinematics over a substantial, continuous distance range, and in a wide range of cosmic environments. Detection of HI sources is typically done by eye and sometimes with the help of optical catalogs of galaxies with known locations. Given that this is a blind search over a very large volume and that these HI sources can be very faint, this standard approach is unlikely to allow us to fully exploit these rich data. In light of this, we are looking into the use of algorithms to aid in the detection of HI sources. We present a source-finding application and discuss its strengths and limitations for these kinds of data. This is a step in advancing data-analysis tools to keep up with the technological advancements of radio telescopes. Once fully tested and applied, our application will help provide the most reliable, complete data set for us to gain insight into the evolution of galaxies as traced by HI and as function of location in the underlying large-scale structure of the universe.
- Publication:
-
American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts #225
- Pub Date:
- January 2015
- Bibcode:
- 2015AAS...22533630G