SIMBAD references

2002AJ....124.1954R - Astron. J., 124, 1954-1974 (2002/October-0)

The 1000 brightest HIPASS galaxies: newly cataloged galaxies.

RYAN-WEBER E., KORIBALSKI B.S., STAVELEY-SMITH L., JERJEN H., KRAAN-KORTEWEG R.C., RYDER S.D., BARNES D.G., DE BLOK W.J.G., KILBORN V.A., BHATHAL R., BOYCE P.J., DISNEY M.J., DRINKWATER M.J., EKERS R.D., FREEMAN K.C., GIBSON B.K., GREEN A.J., HAYNES R.F., HENNING P.A., JURASZEK S., KESTEVEN M.J., KNEZEK P.M., MADER S., MARQUARDING M., MEYER M., MINCHIN R.F., MOULD J.R., O'BRIEN J., OOSTERLOO T., PRICE R.M., PUTMAN M.E., SADLER E.M., SCHROEDER A., STEWART I.M., STOOTMAN F., WAUGH M., WEBSTER R.L., WRIGHT A.E. and ZWAAN M.A.

Abstract (from CDS):

The H I Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS) is a blind 21 cm survey for extragalactic neutral hydrogen, covering the whole southern sky. The HIPASS Bright Galaxy Catalog (BGC) is a subset of HIPASS and contains the 1000 H I-brightest (peak flux density) galaxies. Here we present the 138 HIPASS BGC galaxies that had no redshift measured prior to the Parkes multibeam H I surveys. Of the 138 galaxies, 87 are newly cataloged. Newly cataloged is defined as having no optical (or infrared) counterpart in the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database. Using the Digitized Sky Survey, we identify optical counterparts for almost half of the newly cataloged galaxies, which are typically of irregular or Magellanic morphological type. Several H I sources appear to be associated with compact groups or pairs of galaxies rather than an individual galaxy. The majority (57) of the newly cataloged galaxies lie within 10° of the Galactic plane and are missing from optical surveys as a result of confusion with stars or dust extinction. This sample also includes newly cataloged galaxies first discovered by Henning et al. in the H I shallow survey of the zone of avoidance. The other 30 newly cataloged galaxies escaped detection because of their low surface brightness or optical compactness. Only one of these, HIPASS J0546-68, has no obvious optical counterpart, as it is obscured by the Large Magellanic Cloud. We find that the newly cataloged galaxies with|b|>10° are generally lower in H I mass and narrower in velocity width compared with the total HIPASS BGC. In contrast, newly cataloged galaxies behind the Milky Way are found to be statistically similar to the entire HIPASS BGC. In addition to these galaxies, the HIPASS BGC contains four previously unknown H I clouds.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Galaxies: Distances and Redshifts - Galaxies: Fundamental Parameters - Galaxies: Kinematics and Dynamics - Radio Emission Lines - Surveys

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/AJ/124/1954): table2.dat notes.dat table3.dat>

Nomenclature: Tables 2, 3: [RKS2002] HIPASS JHHMM+DDa N=87+51. Text: [RKS2002] JHHMMSS+DDMMSS N=7.

CDS comments: HIPASS format is JHHMM+DDa and not JHHMM+DDA as used in the paper.

Simbad objects: 35

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