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A study of the core of the Shapley Concentration: III. Properties of the clusters in the A3558 complex

105   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Elena Zucca
 Publication date 1997
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The Shapley Concentration is the richest supercluster of clusters in the nearby universe and its core is a remarkable complex formed by the ACO clusters A3558, A3562 and A3556, and by the two minor groups SC 1327-312 and SC 1329-314. This structure has been studied in various wavelength bands, revealing that it is probably dynamically very active. In this paper we present 174 new galaxy redshifts in this cluster complex, which are added to the sample of 540 already existing velocities. The large number of redshifts permits a more accurate and robust analysis of the dynamical parameters of the clusters. In particular, we discuss the complex velocity distribution of A3558, the bimodal distribution of A3556 and SC 1329-313, and calculate the mean velocity and velocity dispersion of A3562. Moreover, for the three ACO clusters we derive the luminosity functions adopting a new fitting technique, which takes into account the galaxy density profiles.



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100 - T. Venturi 2000
We present the results of a 22 cm radio survey carried out with the A3558 complex, a chain formed by the merging ACO clusters A3556-A3558-A3562 and thetwo groups SC1327-312 and SC1323-313, located in the central region of the complex, a chain formed by the merging ACO clusters A3556-A3558-A3562 and the two groups SC1327-312 and SC1323-313, located in the central region of the Shapley Concentration. The purpose of our survey is to study the effects of cluster mergers on the statistical properties of radio galaxies and to investigate the connection between mergers and the presence of radio halos and relic sources. We found that the radio source counts in the A3558 complex are consistent with the background source counts. Furthermore, we found that no correlation exists between the local density and the radio source power, and that steep spectrum radio galaxies are not segregated in denser optical regions. The radio luminosity function for elliptical and S0 galaxies is significantly lower than that for cluster type galaxies and for those not selected to be in clusters at radio powers logP(1.4) > 22.5, implying that the probability of a galaxy becoming a radio source above this power limit is lower in the Shapley Concentration compared with any other environment. The detection of a head-tail source in the centre of A3562, coupled with careful inspection of the 20 cm NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS) and of 36 cm MOST observations, allowed us to spot two extended sources in the region between A3562 and SC1329-313, i.e. a candidate radio halo at the centre of A3562, and low brightness extended emission around a 14.96 magnitude Shapley galaxy.
98 - S.Bardelli , E.Zucca , A.Malizia 1995
We present the results of a pointed ROSAT PSPC observation of the cluster A3558 which is part of the core of the Shapley Concentration. The X-ray brightness distribution can be fitted as the sum of an elliptical King law, with a major core radius of about 0.20 Mpc and an axial ratio 0.72, and a Gaussian central source associated with the cD galaxy. Among the several discrete sources present in the field, two correspond to the poor clusters SC 1327-312 and SC 1329-313, at about the same redshift as A3558, and two other sources are identified with bright galaxies, which are also part of the core of the Shapley Concentration. There is also evidence of an enhanced diffuse X-ray emission which connects the outer part of A3558 with SC 1327-312. From the spectral analysis, we find that the temperature profile of A3558 is consistent with an isothermal distribution at kT=3.25 keV, while the cD galaxy has the lower temperature kT=1.89 keV. For the cluster we derive a luminosity L_X = 1.1 X 10^44 erg/s, within a radius of 0.8 Mpc and a total mass M_tot = 3.1 X 10^14 M_odot within an Abell radius. In the same region the gas mass is about 20% of the total mass and there are evidences for the hot gas to be less centrally concentrated than the dark matter and the stellar component. For h=1 most of the dynamical mass is in dark matter, while for h=0.5 most of the mass is in hot gas. In both cases, the stellar mass appears to be a good tracer of the total mass distribution. Under the hypothesis that the central density spike represents a cooling flow, we derive a mass deposition rate of 25 M_odot/yrs. The single physical parameters derived for A3558 show a general agreement with the typical values found for other X-ray emitting clusters, but the correlations between these quantities show some peculiarities, probably due to
We present the results of a study of the spectral properties of galaxies in the central part of the Shapley Concentration, covering an extremely wide range of densities, from the rich cluster cores to the underlying supercluster environment. Our sample is homogeneous, in a well defined magnitude range (17=<b_J=<18.8) and contains ~1300 spectra of galaxies at the same distance, covering an area of ~26 sq.deg. These characteristics allowed an accurate spectral classification, that we performed using a Principal Components Analysis technique. This spectral classification, together with the [OII] equivalent widths and the star formation rates, has been used to study the properties of galaxies at different densities: cluster, intercluster (i.e. galaxies in the supercluster but outside clusters) and field environment. No significant differences are present between samples at low density regimes (i.e. intercluster and field galaxies). Cluster galaxies, instead, not only have values significantly different from the field ones, but also show a dependence on the local density. Moreover, a well defined morphology-density relation is present in the cluster complexes, although these structures are known to be involved in major merging events. Also the mean equivalent width of [OII] shows a trend with the local environment, decreasing at increasing densities, even if it is probably induced by the morphology-density relation. Finally we analyzed the mean star formation rate as a function of the density, finding again a decreasing trend (at ~ 3sigma significance level). Our analysis is consistent with the claim of Balogh et al. (1998) that the star formation in clusters is depressed.
88 - S.Bardelli , E.Zucca , G.Zamorani 1999
(abridged) We present the results of a redshift survey of intercluster galaxies in the central region of the Shapley Concentration supercluster, aimed at determining the distribution of galaxies in between obvious overdensities. Our sample is formed by 442 new redshifts, mainly in the b_J magnitude range 17-18.8. Adding the data from our redshift surveys on the A3558 and A3528 complexes, which are close to the geometrical centre of this supercluster, we obtain a total sample of ~2000 radial velocities. Using the 1440 galaxies of our total sample in the magnitude range 17 - 18.8, we reconstructed the density profile in the central part of the Shapley Concentration; moreover we detected another significant overdensity at ~30000 km/s (dubbed S300). We estimate the total overdensity in galaxies, the mass and the dynamical state of these structures, and discuss the effect of considering a bias between the galaxy distribution and the underlying matter. We find an indication that the value of the bias between clusters and galaxies in the Shapley Concentration is higher that that reported in literature, confirming the impression that this supercluster is very rich in clusters. Finally, from the comparison with some theoretical scenarios, we find that the existence of the Shapley Concentration is more consistent with the predictions of the models with a matter density parameter <1, such as open CDM and Lambda CDM.
We present here the first results of a 22cm survey of the Shapley Concentration core. The observations were carried out with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. Our radio observations completely and uniformely cover the A3558 complex, allowing a thorough multifrequency study, by comparison of our results with the available optical spectroscopic and X-ray data of the whole chain. We will present here some statistical results of our survey and compare them with the information on the dynamics of the chain and on the properties of the intracluster gas. Attention will also be devoted to the extended radio galaxies found in our survey.
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