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Abell 1413

Galaxy cluster in constellations Coma Berenices and Leo


Galaxy cluster in constellations Coma Berenices and Leo

FieldValue
nameAbell 1413
imageGalaxy Cluster Abell 1413.jpg
captionThe cD elliptical galaxy Abell 1413 BCG dominates this image of Abell 1413. Note the arcs caused by gravitational lensing. Image by HST's WFC3/ACS.
epochJ2000
ra{{cite web
urlhttp://ned.ipac.caltech.edu/cgi-bin/nph-objsearch?objname=Abell+1413&extend=no
titleNED results for object ABELL 1413
publisherNASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED)
access-dateMarch 15, 2012
dec
richness3{{cite journal
last1Abell
first1George O.
author-link1George O. Abell
last2Corwin
first2Harold G. Jr.
author-link2Harold G. Corwin
last3Olowin
first3Ronald P.
author-link3Ronald P. Olowin
dateMay 1989
titleA catalog of rich clusters of galaxies
journalAstrophysical Journal Supplement Series
volume70
issueMay 1989
pages1–138
issn0067-0049
bibcode1989ApJS...70....1A
doi10.1086/191333
doi-accessfree
bmtypeI
redshift0.1427
distance639.59 Mpc
temperature7.38 keVTable 4 from {{cite journal
last1Vikhlinin
first1A.
last2Kravtsov
first2A.
author3Forman, W.author4=Jones, C.author5=Markevitch, M.author6=Murray, S. S.author7=Van Speybroeck, L.
dateApril 2006
titleChandra Sample of Nearby Relaxed Galaxy Clusters: Mass, Gas Fraction, and Mass-Temperature Relation
journalThe Astrophysical Journal
volume640
issue2
pages691–709
locationChicago, Illinois, USA
arxivastro-ph/0507092
bibcode2006ApJ...640..691V
doi10.1086/500288
s2cid18940822
mass7.57

| access-date = March 15, 2012 | author-link1 = George O. Abell | author-link2 = Harold G. Corwin | author-link3 = Ronald P. Olowin | doi-access = free Abell 1413 is a massive and rich type I galaxy cluster straddling the border between the constellations Leo and Coma Berenices, with the projected comoving distance of approximately 640 Mpc. The cluster is especially notable due to the presence of its very large brightest cluster galaxy (BCG), one of the most extreme examples of its type, as well as one of the largest galaxies known. The cluster was first noted by George O. Abell in 1958.

History

Abell 1413 is one of the original 2,712 galaxy clusters compiled in the Abell catalogue, compiled by the American astronomer George O. Abell in 1958, using data retrieved from the National Geographic Society – Palomar Observatory Sky Survey.

Characteristics

Abell 1413 is classified as a type I galaxy cluster, characterized due to the presence of a single, massive galaxy in its center that dominates its smaller members. Thomas W. Noonan in 1971 characterized the cluster as having 60% the richness of the Coma Cluster, based on the assumption that the central cD elliptical is not a foreground object.

Abell 1413 BCG

(diameter; 25.0 mag/arcsec2 r-band isophote (SDSS)

The brightest cluster galaxy of Abell 1413, or Abell 1413 BCG (MCG 04-28-097) is the supergiant elliptical galaxy that is the dominant member of the cluster. As early as 1965, astronomers William Wilson Morgan and Janet Rountree Lesh pointed out the galaxy's extreme nature, citing it as a "very large and luminous central galaxy" that could possibly be the largest of all cD ellipticals discovered, and hence must be checked for being a possible foreground object. During the following decade, several other papers observed the cluster, particularly its cD galaxy, hence revealing its very extreme properties. It was found to be among the most luminous galaxies known, and a titanic envelope was observed using very deep photographic plates. Following studies would then publish extremely large effective radii for the central galaxy.

Abell 1413 BCG is also notable due to its extreme ellipticity, making it the most elliptical brightest cluster galaxy known. It is rare for brightest cluster galaxies to have such an ellipticity; even then, Abell 1413 BCG is the most extreme known example of all of these.

Further information

Abell 1413 is located 2 billion light years away from Earth between the constellations of Leo and Coma Berenices. It is one of 4,073 clusters of galaxies at redshift (meaning they are moving away from earth,) that are somewhat close to the Earth. Abell 1413 holds about 300 galaxies together with its strong gravity. Due to the strong interactions in the cluster, the material is heated up to 100 million degrees. Because of this intense heat, strong X-ray radiation is emitted from the cluster. Scientists using the Canada-France-Hawaii telescope observed Abell 1413 and built a sample of over 250 galaxies. These scientists consider Abell 1413 to be relaxed even though it has a highly elliptical shape. The scientists also concluded that the cluster ellipticity at large radii is around .8 while the cluster ellipticity at the center is about .35, and that the cluster is aligned in the North-South direction, a few degrees westward.

References

References

  1. "Hubble reveals a super-rich galactic neighbourhood". ESA/Hubble.
  2. Abell, George O.. (May 1, 1958). "The Distribution of Rich Clusters of Galaxies.". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series.
  3. Noonan, Thomas W.. (February 1, 1972). "The Cluster of Galaxies Abell 1413". The Astronomical Journal.
  4. "By Name | NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database".
  5. (1965). "The Supergiant Galaxies.". The Astrophysical Journal.
  6. (November 1974). "The Systematic Properties of Clusters of Galaxies. Photometry of 15 Clusters". Astrophysical Journal.
  7. (September 1974). "Studies of rich clusters of galaxies - II. The structure and luminosity function of the cluster A 1413.". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
  8. (November 1976). "The structure of elliptical and cD galaxies.". Astrophysical Journal.
  9. (May 1988). "The Structure of Brightest Cluster Members. III. cD Envelopes". Astrophysical Journal.
  10. (1987). "Structure and Dynamics of Elliptical Galaxies".
  11. (August 1987). "The Structure of Brightest Cluster Members. II. Mergers". Astrophysical Journal Supplement.
  12. (May 1991). "CCD Observations of Abell Clusters. V. Isophotometry of 175 Brightest Elliptical Galaxies in Abell Clusters". Astrophysical Journal.
  13. (2014-11-10). "Hubble Views Galaxy Cluster Abell 1413". SciTech Daily.
  14. (2012). "Deep optical observations of the massive galaxy cluster Abell 1413". Astronomy & Astrophysics.
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