Abstract
We built a multi-wavelength dataset for galaxies from the Local Volume HI
Survey (LVHIS), which comprises 82 galaxies. We also select a sub-sample of ten
large galaxies for investigating properties in the galactic outskirts. The
LVHIS sample covers nearly four orders of magnitude in stellar mass and two
orders of magnitude in HI mass fraction (fHI). The radial distribution of HI
gas with respect to the stellar disc is correlated with fHI but with a large
scatter. We confirm the previously found correlations between the total HI mass
and star formation rate (SFR), and between HI surface densities and SFR surface
densities beyond R25. However, the former correlation becomes much weaker when
the average surface densities rather than total mass or rate are considered,
and the latter correlation also becomes much weaker when the effect of stellar
mass is removed or controlled. Hence the link between SFR and HI is
intrinsically weak in these regions, consistent with what was found on kpc
scales in the galactic inner regions. We find a strong correlation between the
SFR surface density and the stellar mass surface density, which is consistent
with the star formation models where the gas is in quasi-equilibrium with the
mid-plane pressure. We find no evidence for HI warps to be linked with
decreasing star forming efficiencies.
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