CHILES XII: The H I evolution of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies between 0<z<0.48
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 12:54 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies show little change in average neutral hydrogen mass from redshift 0 to 0.48 while depleting their gas much faster than typical galaxies.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Using cubelet stacking on CHILES HI data in the COSMOS field, the average HI mass for LCBGs is found to be an upper limit of 4.89×10^9 solar masses at z=0.26, 2.49±0.75×10^9 at z=0.35, and 6.44±2.71×10^9 at z=0.45. There is no strong evidence for evolution in average HI mass. LCBGs retain substantial gas reservoirs with constant gas fractions consistent with the larger star-forming population, but their gas depletion timescales are nearly an order of magnitude shorter than in normal star-forming galaxies, aligning with the drop in their number density.
What carries the argument
Cubelet stacking of HI emission line data from the CHILES survey to measure average HI masses in redshift-binned samples of LCBGs.
If this is right
- LCBGs maintain roughly constant average HI masses across 0 < z < 0.48.
- Gas fractions in LCBGs stay steady and match those of the broader star-forming galaxy population.
- Gas depletion timescales for LCBGs are about ten times shorter than for typical star-forming galaxies.
- The short depletion times coincide with the sharp decline in LCBG number density at these redshifts.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the short depletion times are driven by intense star formation, LCBGs may represent a brief evolutionary phase where galaxies rapidly build stars before settling into more stable forms.
- Surveys covering larger areas than the single COSMOS field could test whether the lack of HI mass evolution holds beyond cosmic variance effects.
- Direct HI detections in individual high-redshift LCBGs would help confirm if the stacked averages accurately reflect the population.
Load-bearing premise
The stacking method assumes that LCBG samples are selected without bias across redshift and that averaging non-detections does not create systematic errors from differences in galaxy properties or noise levels.
What would settle it
Measuring individual HI masses for a statistically significant number of LCBGs at z approximately 0.45 that are substantially higher or lower than the stacked value of 6.44×10^9 solar masses would challenge the no-evolution conclusion.
Figures
read the original abstract
We study the evolution of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs) by making use of H I emission line data provided by the full 856 h COSMOS H I Large Extragalactic Survey (CHILES), which spans a redshift range of $0\leq z\leq 0.48$ within the COSMOS field. We report the results on a cubelet stacking analysis, which we use to estimate the average H I mass evolution of LCBGs in the field up to $z=0.48$. For the stacks that do not show a detection, we report an upper limit estimate of the average H I mass. We also report on two directly detected LCBGs. We find the average H I mass in LCBGs at redshifts $z=0.26$, $z=0.35$ and $z=0.45$ respectively to be $\langle M_{\rm HI}\rangle<4.89\times10^9$ M$_\odot$, $\langle M_{\rm HI}\rangle=(2.49\pm0.75)\times10^9$ M$_\odot$ and $\langle M_{\rm HI}\rangle=(6.44\pm2.71)\times10^9$ M$_\odot$. We see no strong evidence for evolution in the average H I mass over this redshift range, consistent with other recent studies of the evolution of the H I in galaxies at $z<0.5$. On average, LCBGs appear to retain substantial gas reservoirs, with gas fractions staying constant and remaining broadly consistent with those of the larger star-forming population. LCBG gas depletion timescales are nearly an order of magnitude shorter than in normal star-forming galaxies across the studied redshift range, aligning with the period during which their number density drops sharply.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper analyzes HI emission from the CHILES survey in the COSMOS field to measure the average HI mass evolution of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs) over 0 ≤ z ≤ 0.48 using cubelet stacking. It reports stacked average HI masses of <4.89×10^9 M⊙ at z=0.26 (upper limit), (2.49±0.75)×10^9 M⊙ at z=0.35, and (6.44±2.71)×10^9 M⊙ at z=0.45, along with two direct detections. The central claims are that there is no strong evidence for evolution in average HI mass, that gas fractions remain constant and consistent with the broader star-forming population, and that LCBG gas depletion timescales are nearly an order of magnitude shorter than in normal star-forming galaxies.
Significance. If the stacking results hold after addressing selection and variance issues, the work supplies direct observational constraints on HI content in LCBGs during the epoch when their number density declines sharply. It aligns with other low-z HI studies and highlights the rapid gas consumption in these galaxies while they retain substantial reservoirs, providing a useful benchmark for models of galaxy evolution and star-formation quenching.
major comments (2)
- [§4] §4 (Stacking Analysis): The conclusion of no strong evolution in ⟨M_HI⟩ across the three redshift bins rests on the direct comparability of the reported stacked values. However, the text does not demonstrate that the LCBG selection criteria (luminosity, compactness, color) produce equivalent populations at z=0.26, 0.35, and 0.45 after accounting for k-corrections and possible evolutionary changes in galaxy properties; without this validation or a modeled selection function, the upper limit at z=0.26 and the factor-of-~2.5 variation between the z=0.35 and z=0.45 detections cannot be interpreted as evidence against evolution.
- [§4.3] §4.3 and error budget discussion: The stacking of non-detections assumes that the average is unbiased with respect to varying noise properties, undetected galaxy characteristics, and cosmic variance within the single COSMOS field. No Monte Carlo simulations of the stacking procedure or multi-field comparison are presented to quantify possible systematic offsets, which directly affects the reliability of the z=0.26 upper limit and the z=0.45 detection used to support the constant gas-fraction and short depletion-time claims.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The redshift range is stated as 0<z<0.48 in the title but 0≤z≤0.48 in the text; clarify the exact range and whether z=0 objects are included in any stack.
- Notation: Use consistent symbols for average HI mass (⟨M_HI⟩) throughout and define the gas fraction and depletion timescale explicitly in the text or a table when first introduced.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thoughtful and constructive review of our manuscript on the HI evolution of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies using CHILES data. We address each major comment below in detail, indicating revisions where we agree changes are warranted to strengthen the presentation of our results.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [§4] The conclusion of no strong evolution in ⟨M_HI⟩ across the three redshift bins rests on the direct comparability of the reported stacked values. However, the text does not demonstrate that the LCBG selection criteria (luminosity, compactness, color) produce equivalent populations at z=0.26, 0.35, and 0.45 after accounting for k-corrections and possible evolutionary changes in galaxy properties; without this validation or a modeled selection function, the upper limit at z=0.26 and the factor-of-~2.5 variation between the z=0.35 and z=0.45 detections cannot be interpreted as evidence against evolution.
Authors: We agree that careful consideration of sample equivalence is needed to interpret the stacked HI masses. The LCBG criteria (luminosity, compactness, and blue color) are applied uniformly across bins using the same rest-frame definitions from the literature, with k-corrections incorporated into the photometry as described in Section 2. We have confirmed that average stellar masses and other ancillary properties remain comparable between bins. A complete modeled selection function incorporating all possible evolutionary effects is beyond the current scope, but we will expand the discussion in the revised Section 4 to explicitly address potential selection biases and their implications for the no-evolution conclusion, emphasizing that the measurements are consistent within the reported uncertainties. revision: partial
-
Referee: [§4.3] The stacking of non-detections assumes that the average is unbiased with respect to varying noise properties, undetected galaxy characteristics, and cosmic variance within the single COSMOS field. No Monte Carlo simulations of the stacking procedure or multi-field comparison are presented to quantify possible systematic offsets, which directly affects the reliability of the z=0.26 upper limit and the z=0.45 detection used to support the constant gas-fraction and short depletion-time claims.
Authors: We appreciate this feedback on the robustness of our error analysis. The stacking follows standard HI literature methods, and our error budget already incorporates contributions from noise, sample variance, and cosmic variance. To further quantify possible systematic offsets from noise properties and undetected galaxy characteristics, we will include Monte Carlo simulations of the stacking procedure in the revised manuscript. However, because the CHILES data are restricted to the single COSMOS field, a multi-field comparison is not feasible with existing observations; we will add explicit discussion of this limitation and its implications for the results. revision: partial
- Inability to perform a multi-field comparison to assess cosmic variance, as the survey is limited to the single COSMOS field.
Circularity Check
No circularity: direct observational stacking of CHILES HI data yields reported masses without self-referential fits or derivations
full rationale
This is a purely observational paper reporting stacked HI masses and upper limits from CHILES cubelets for LCBGs at different redshifts. The central results (<M_HI> values at z=0.26, 0.35, 0.45) are direct measurements from the data cubes, with non-detections handled by averaging and upper limits. No equations or derivations reduce these to parameters fitted from the same dataset. Claims of no strong evolution and consistency with other studies rely on external comparisons, not internal self-citation chains or ansatzes. The analysis is self-contained against the survey data without load-bearing self-references that collapse the result to its inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard flat Lambda-CDM cosmology for converting observed redshift to comoving distance and look-back time
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Aghanim N., et al., 2020, A&A, 641, A6 Bera A., Kanekar N., Chengalur J. N., Bagla J. S., 2023, ApJ Letters, 950, L18 Bianchetti A., et al., 2025, ApJ, 982, 82 Blue Bird J., et al., 2020, MNRAS, 492, 153 Blue Bird J., et al., 2026, ApJ, 998, 248 Blyth S.-L., et al., 2016, Proceedings of Science Cardamone C., et al., 2009, MNRAS, 399, 1191 Chen Q., Meyer M...
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.