INVESTIGADORES
MURIEL Hernan
artículos
Título:
Structure and dynamics of the Shapley Supercluster. Velocity catalogue, general morphology and mass
Autor/es:
PROUST, D.; QUINTANA, H.; CARRASCO, E. R.; REISENEGGER, A.; SLEZAK, E.; MURIEL, H.; DÜNNER, R.; SODRÉ, L., JR.; DRINKWATER, M. J.; PARKER, Q. A.; RAGONE, C. J.
Revista:
ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS
Editorial:
EDP SCIENCES S A
Referencias:
Año: 2006 vol. 447 p. 133 - 144
ISSN:
0004-6361
Resumen:
We present results of our wide-field redshift survey of galaxies in a 285 square degree region of the Shapley Supercluster (SSC), based on a set of 10 529 velocity measurements (including 1201 new ones) on 8632 galaxies obtained from various telescopes and from the literature. Our data reveal that the main plane of the SSC (v aprox 14 500 km s^-1) extends further than previous estimates, filling the whole extent of our survey region of 12 degrees by 30 degrees on the sky (30 x 75 h^-1 Mpc). There is also a connecting structure associated with the slightly nearer Abell 3571 cluster complex (v aprox 12 000 km s^-1). These galaxies seem to link two previously identified sheets of galaxies and establish a connection with a third one at overline v= 15 000 km s^-1 near RA= 13^h. They also tend to fill the gap of galaxies between the foreground Hydra-Centaurus region and the more distant SSC. In the velocity range of the Shapley Supercluster (9000 km s^-1 lt cz lt 18 000 km s^-1), we found redshift-space overdensities with b_j lt 17.5 of aprox 5.4 over the 225 square degree central region and aprox 3.8 in a 192 square degree region excluding rich clusters. Over the large region of our survey, we find that the intercluster galaxies make up 48 per cent of the observed galaxies in the SSC region and, accounting for the different completeness, may contribute nearly twice as much mass as the cluster galaxies. In this paper, we discuss the completeness of the velocity catalogue, the morphology of the supercluster, the global overdensity, and some properties of the individual galaxy clusters in the Supercluster.