Wednesday, December 5, 2012

1212.0840 (Igor D. Karachentsev et al.)

Intense look at Virgo Southern Extension    [PDF]

Igor D. Karachentsev, Olga G. Nasonova
We collected data on radial velocities and distances of galaxies to elucidate structure and kinematics of the filament attached to the Virgo cluster from south. In the region RA = [12.5 - 13.5]h, Dec = [-20 - 0]deg there are 171 galaxies with radial velocities VLG < 2000 km/s, and 98 of them have distance estimates. This galaxy cloud, called as "Virgo Southern Extension", is situated just on the edge of the Virgo "zero-velocity surface". The mean distance to Virgo SEx, 17pm2 Mpc, and the average radial velocity, 1172pm23 km/s, are very close to the Virgo cluster ones. In Supergalactic coordinates the Virgo SEx dimensions are 15x7x2 Mpc, where the major axis is directed along the line of sight, the second-major axis looks towards the Virgo core and the minor one is perpendicular to the Supergalactic plane. This flattened cloud consists of a dozen virialized groups with the total K-band luminosity of 1.7cdot10^12 Lsol and the total virial mass of 6.3cdot10^13 Msol, having a typical dark matter-to-stellar matter ratio of 37. The Hubble diagram for Virgo SEx galaxies exhibits a tendency of Z-shape wave with a velocity amplitude of ~250 km/s that may be caused by a mass overdensity of ~6cdot10^13 Msol, and in order of magnitude agrees with the sum of virial masses of the groups.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1212.0840

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