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Clusters of Galaxies. The largest known objects in our Universe…. Local Supercluster. The Local supercluster contains the Virgo cluster of galaxies as well as about 50 galaxy groups. M87. Virgo cluster of galaxies. The Virgo cluster of galaxies is about 65 million light years away
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Clusters of Galaxies The largest known objects in our Universe…
Local Supercluster • The Local supercluster contains the Virgo cluster of galaxies as well as about 50 galaxy groups
M87 Virgo cluster of galaxies • The Virgo cluster of galaxies is about 65 million light years away • It contains about 2000 galaxies • It is dominated by M87
Types of Galaxy Clusters • Regular clusters • concentrated central core • well-defined spherical structure • size in the range 1-10 Mpc • mass M ~ 10 Mo • Coma cluster • Irregular clusters • no well-defined center • similar size range • mass 10 -10 Mo • Virgo cluster
Perseus Cluster • One of the closest galaxy clusters at a distance of 300 million light years • Part of the Perseus Pisces supercluster which is 15 degrees across and has over 1000 galaxies
Virgo/ROSAT X-ray emission from Clusters • Clusters of galaxies are virially bound by dark matter which is traced by hot gas • Mass of hot gas is more than 3 times the mass of the visible light galaxies in the Virgo cluster • X-rays are concentrated around M87
Virgo/ROSAT M87 Virgo Cluster in Visible/X-ray
NGC2300/ROSAT X-ray emission from Clusters • Clusters of galaxies are virially bound by dark matter which is traced by hot gas
Merging Clusters • A2256 cluster has about 500 galaxies • It is about 10 million light years across • It is about 1 billion light years away • The 80 million degree gas is brightest in the center where two clusters are merging
Coma Cluster • Coma cluster has about 1000 galaxies • It is located near the north galactic pole • It is about 300 million light years away • Large bright central cluster is merging with smaller galaxy group at the lower right
Small Cluster • X-rays from this smaller cluster were discovered by ROSAT • Hot gas engulfs the two bright elliptical galaxies • It is about 500 million light years away
X-ray emission from Clusters • Temperature profiles of X-ray emitting gas shows differences in cluster evolution • This cluster is almost isothermal (all one temperature) but is slightly cooler towards the outside of the cluster
Merging Clusters • This cluster is not isothermal • It shows a very hot region indicating a shock formed where two galaxies in the cluster may have collided
ESO/Optical Cannibal Cluster • A3827 is about 1.5 billion light years away • The central dominant galaxy is eating five smaller galaxies
Very Distant Cluster • This cluster is 8 billion light years away, so it formed when the universe was half its present age
Very Distant Cluster • This is a very red cluster (Doppler Shift) • It is the most distant cluster discovered by HST • It may be too far away to have formed in a dense universe