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Main Authors: Moreno, Jorge, Wheeler, Coral, Mercado, Francisco J., Wimberly, M. Katy Rodriguez, Gandhi, Pratik J., Samuel, Jenna, Feldmann, Robert, Bullock, James S., Wetzel, Andrew, Boylan-Kolchin, Michael
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27047
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author Moreno, Jorge
Wheeler, Coral
Mercado, Francisco J.
Wimberly, M. Katy Rodriguez
Gandhi, Pratik J.
Samuel, Jenna
Feldmann, Robert
Bullock, James S.
Wetzel, Andrew
Boylan-Kolchin, Michael
author_facet Moreno, Jorge
Wheeler, Coral
Mercado, Francisco J.
Wimberly, M. Katy Rodriguez
Gandhi, Pratik J.
Samuel, Jenna
Feldmann, Robert
Bullock, James S.
Wetzel, Andrew
Boylan-Kolchin, Michael
contents HI-rich starless halos, should they exist, hold great promise for elucidating properties of dark matter halos. This Letter examines the properties of HI-rich failed halos at redshift zero across state-of-the-art cosmological simulations (FIREbox, NIVARIA-LG and Recal-EAGLE). First we compare two numerical analogs with Cloud-9, purported to be the first discovery of a starless HI-rich halo. We argue that differences may be driven by environmental factors, and/or the treatment of gas self-shielding -- which might further limit existing analytic schemes aimed at inferring dark matter halo information from 21 cm HI observations. We also find that the failed halo samples in the three simulations span different regions of the HI-gas-halo mass ($M_{\rm HI}-M_{\rm gas}-M_{\rm 200}$) plane. FIREbox objects occupy a very narrow regime, while NIVARIA-LG extends to a wider range of $M_{\rm 200}$ values - and achieves higher $M_{\rm HI}$ and $M_{\rm gas}$ values. Recal-EAGLE $M_{\rm HI}$ values are similar to FIREbox, albeit with lower gas and halo masses. Lastly, we predict that more HI-rich starless halos can be discovered by exploring the HI-poor regime in the local universe, rather than HI-rich populations at high redshift. Overall, we advocate for the allocation of resources to detect and characterize other HI-rich (and HI-poor) failed halos in the local universe, plus dedicated follow-up spectroscopic observations that scrutinize claims to the absence of a faint stellar component, and that assess their isolation status in detail.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_27047
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Beyond Cloud-9: The case for discovering more HI-rich failed halos
Moreno, Jorge
Wheeler, Coral
Mercado, Francisco J.
Wimberly, M. Katy Rodriguez
Gandhi, Pratik J.
Samuel, Jenna
Feldmann, Robert
Bullock, James S.
Wetzel, Andrew
Boylan-Kolchin, Michael
Astrophysics of Galaxies
HI-rich starless halos, should they exist, hold great promise for elucidating properties of dark matter halos. This Letter examines the properties of HI-rich failed halos at redshift zero across state-of-the-art cosmological simulations (FIREbox, NIVARIA-LG and Recal-EAGLE). First we compare two numerical analogs with Cloud-9, purported to be the first discovery of a starless HI-rich halo. We argue that differences may be driven by environmental factors, and/or the treatment of gas self-shielding -- which might further limit existing analytic schemes aimed at inferring dark matter halo information from 21 cm HI observations. We also find that the failed halo samples in the three simulations span different regions of the HI-gas-halo mass ($M_{\rm HI}-M_{\rm gas}-M_{\rm 200}$) plane. FIREbox objects occupy a very narrow regime, while NIVARIA-LG extends to a wider range of $M_{\rm 200}$ values - and achieves higher $M_{\rm HI}$ and $M_{\rm gas}$ values. Recal-EAGLE $M_{\rm HI}$ values are similar to FIREbox, albeit with lower gas and halo masses. Lastly, we predict that more HI-rich starless halos can be discovered by exploring the HI-poor regime in the local universe, rather than HI-rich populations at high redshift. Overall, we advocate for the allocation of resources to detect and characterize other HI-rich (and HI-poor) failed halos in the local universe, plus dedicated follow-up spectroscopic observations that scrutinize claims to the absence of a faint stellar component, and that assess their isolation status in detail.
title Beyond Cloud-9: The case for discovering more HI-rich failed halos
topic Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27047