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VLA IMAGING OF VIRGO SPIRALS IN ATOMIC GAS (VIVA). I. THE ATLAS AND THE H I PROPERTIES

Aeree Chung et al 2009 The Astronomical Journal 138 1741-1816   doi: 10.1088/0004-6256/138/6/1741  Help

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Aeree Chung1,4, J. H. van Gorkom1, Jeffrey D. P. Kenney2, Hugh Crowl2,5 and Bernd Vollmer3
1 Department of Astronomy, Columbia University, 550 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027, USA
2 Department of Astronomy, Yale University, P.O. Box 208101, New Haven, CT 06520, USA
3 Observatoire astronomique de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'universite, 67000 Strasbourg, France
4 Currently NRAO Jansky Postdoctoral Fellow at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, P.O. Box O, Socorro, NM 87801, USA.
5 Current address: Department of Astronomy, University of Massachusetts, 710 North Pleasant Street, Amherst, MA 01003-9305, USA.
E-mail: achung@aoc.nrao.edu, jvangork@astro.columbia.edu, kenney@astro.yale.edu, hugh@astro.yale.edu, hugh@astro.umass.edu and bvollmer@astro.u-strasbg.fr

ABSTRACT. We present the results of a new VLA H I Imaging survey of Virgo galaxies, the VLA Imaging survey of Virgo galaxies in Atomic gas (VIVA). The survey includes high-resolution H I data of 53 carefully selected late type galaxies (48 spirals and five irregular systems). The goal is to study environmental effects on H I gas properties of cluster galaxies to understand which physical mechanisms affect galaxy evolution in different density regions, and to establish how far out the impact of the cluster reaches. As a dynamically young cluster, Virgo contains examples of galaxies experiencing a variety of environmental effects. Its nearness allows us to study each galaxy in great detail. We have selected Virgo galaxies with a range of star formation properties in low to high density regions (at projected distances from M87, d 87 = 0.3-3.3 Mpc). Contrary to previous studies, more than half of the galaxies in the sample (~60%) are fainter than 12 mag in BT . Overall, the selected galaxies represent the late type Virgo galaxies (S0/a to Sd/Irr) down to mp lsim 14.6 fairly well in morphological type, systemic velocity, subcluster membership, H I mass, and deficiency. The H I observations were done in C short (CS) configuration of the VLA radio telescope, with a typical spatial resolution of 15'' and a column density sensitivity of ≈3-5 × 1019 cm–2 in 3σ per 10 km s–1 channel. The survey was supplemented with data of comparable quality from the NRAO archive, taken in CS or C configuration. In this paper, we present H I channel maps, total intensity maps, velocity fields, velocity dispersions, global/radial profiles, position-velocity diagrams and overlays of H I/1.4 GHz continuum maps on the optical images. We also present H I properties such as total flux (S H I ), H I mass (M H I ), linewidths (W 20 and W 50), velocity (V H I ), deficiency (def H I ), and size (D eff H I and D iso H I ), and describe the H I morphology and kinematics of individual galaxies in detail. The survey has revealed details of H I features that were never seen before. In this paper, we briefly discuss differences in typical H I morphology for galaxies in regions of different galaxy densities. We confirm that galaxies near the cluster core (d 87 lsim 0.5 Mpc) have H I disks that are smaller compared to their stellar disks (D H I /D 25 < 0.5). Most of these galaxies in the core also show gas displaced from the disk, which is either currently being stripped or falling back after a stripping event. At intermediate distances (d 87 ~ 1 Mpc) from the center, we find a remarkable number of galaxies with long one-sided H I tails pointing away from M87. In a previous letter, we argue that these galaxies are recent arrivals, falling into the Virgo core for the first time. In the outskirts, we find many gas-rich galaxies, with gas disks extending far beyond their optical disks. Interestingly, we also find some galaxies with H I disks that are smaller compared to their stellar disks at large clustercentric distances.

Key words: galaxies: clusters: general; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: interactions; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics

Print publication: Issue 6 (2009 December)
Received 2009 June 9, accepted for publication 2009 September 3
Published 2009 November 3

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