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A&A 371, 45-51 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010313
The mysterious H I deficiency of NGC 3175
M. Dahlem1, M. Ehle2, 3 and S. D. Ryder41 Sterrewacht Leiden, Postbus 9513, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
2 XMM-Newton Science Operations Centre, Apartado 50727, 28080 Madrid, Spain
3 Astrophysics Division, Space Science Department of ESA, ESTEC, 2200 AG Noordwijk, The Netherlands
4 Anglo-Australian Observatory, PO Box 296, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
(Received 6 June 2000 / Accepted 28 February 2001 )
Abstract
Australia Telescope Compact Array H I observations reveal the
existence of 5.8 108
of H I gas in the central 7 kpc of the edge-on spiral galaxy NGC 3175. The detected H Iand CO gas can explain why star formation, as traced by other
emission processes, is going on in the inner part of its disk.
On the other hand, the entire outer disk, beyond 3.5 kpc radius,
shows no H I emission, has a very red colour and exhibits
neither radio continuum nor H
emission. This indicates
that the outer part of NGC 3175 is quiescent, i.e. not forming
stars at a measurable rate.
Its H I deficiency and the small extent of the H I layer,
which is confined to the boundaries of the optically visible
disk, make NGC 3175 a peculiar spiral galaxy.
No intergalactic H I gas in the NGC 3175 group was detected
in our interferometric observations. Earlier Parkes telescope
single dish H I observations put an upper limit on the amount
of diffuse gas that might have been missed by the interferometer
at 2 108
. On DSS plates no galaxy in the NGC 3175
group of galaxies (García 1993) is close enough to it
and none exhibits disturbances that could indicate a close
interaction which might have led to the stripping of large
parts of its H I gas. Thus, despite an extensive multi-wavelength
investigation, the reason for the unusual absence of H I and
star formation activity in the outer disk of NGC 3175 remains
an intriguing mystery.
Key words: galaxies: evolution -- galaxies: general -- galaxies: individual: NGC 3175 -- galaxies: interactions -- galaxies: ISM -- galaxies: spiral
Offprint request: M. Dahlem, mdahlem@eso.org
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2001
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