It seems odd to me to see a spiral galaxy with bright blue clusters of young hot stars but no obvious red areas of the hydrogen gas from which stars form. My first thought was that the galaxy may be remarkably dusty and the dust somehow obscures the visible red light of hydrogen alpha radiation. But the wikipedia article on NGC 4921 discusses radio observations of this galaxy. Radio waves pass through dust more easily than visible light does (e.g., my bedside radio still receives a signal even if I haven't dusted recently).
So if there is remarkably little hydrogen in this galaxy, how did these stars form? And if there was abundant hydrogen a few tens of millions of years ago and very little now, where did it go? If there was some sort of interaction with the intergalactic medium how might this work?wikipedia wrote:When examined at the 21 cm wavelength Hydrogen line, NGC 4921 was found to be strongly H I deficient, which means it is low in non-ionized hydrogen gas. The distribution of the gas has also been deeply perturbed toward the SE spiral arm and is less extended than the optical disk of the galaxy. This may have been caused by interaction with the intergalactic medium, which is stripping off the gas.[7]