A 2163: Merger events in the hottest Abell galaxy cluster. I. Dynamical analysis from optical data - Université Paris Nanterre Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Astronomy and Astrophysics - A&A Année : 2008

A 2163: Merger events in the hottest Abell galaxy cluster. I. Dynamical analysis from optical data

S. Maurogordato

Résumé

Context: A 2163 is among the richest and most distant Abell clusters, presenting outstanding properties in different wavelength domains. X-ray observations have revealed a distorted gas morphology and strong features have been detected in the temperature map, suggesting that merging processes are important in this cluster. However, the merging scenario is not yet well-defined. Aims: We have undertaken a complementary optical analysis, aiming to understand the dynamics of the system, to constrain the merging scenario and to test its effect on the properties of galaxies. Methods: We present a detailed optical analysis of A 2163 based on new multicolor wide-field imaging and medium-to-high resolution spectroscopy of several hundred galaxies. Results: The projected galaxy density distribution shows strong subclustering with two dominant structures: a main central component (A), and a northern component (B), visible both in optical and in X-ray, with two other substructures detected at high significance in the optical. At magnitudes fainter than R=19, the galaxy distribution shows a clear elongation approximately with the east-west axis extending over 4~h70-1 Mpc, while a nearly perpendicular bridge of galaxies along the north-south axis appears to connect (B) to (A). The (A) component shows a bimodal morphology, and the positions of its two density peaks depend on galaxy luminosity: at magnitudes fainter than R = 19, the axis joining the peaks shows a counterclockwise rotation (from NE/SW to E-W) centered on the position of the X-ray maximum. Our final spectroscopic catalog of 512 objects includes 476 new galaxy redshifts. We have identified 361 galaxies as cluster members; among them, 326 have high precision redshift measurements, which allow us to perform a detailed dynamical analysis of unprecedented accuracy. The cluster mean redshift and velocity dispersion are respectively z= 0.2005 ± 0.0003 and 1434 ± 60 km s-1. We spectroscopically confirm that the northern and western components (A 2163-B and A 2163-C) belong to the A 2163 complex. The velocity distribution shows multi-modality, with an overall bimodal structure peaking at ~59 200 km s-1 and ?60 500 km s-1. A significant velocity gradient (~1250 km s-1) is detected along the NE/SW axis of the cluster, which partially explains the detected bimodality. A 2163 appears to be exceptionally massive: the cluster virial mass is M_vir = 3.8 ± 0.4 × 1015~M_?~h70-1. Conclusions: Our analysis of the optical data, combined with the available information from X-ray observations and predictions of numerical simulations, supports a scenario in which A 2163-A has undergone a recent (t ? 0.5 Gyr) merger along a NE/SW (or E-W) axis, and A 2163-B is connected to the main complex, and is probably infalling on A 2163-A. Based on data obtained with the European Southern Observatory, Chile (runs 073.A-0672 and 077.A-0813) and with the Canada France Hawaii Telescope. Table 1 is only available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/481/593

Dates et versions

hal-00287036 , version 1 (10-06-2008)

Identifiants

Citer

S. Maurogordato, A. Cappi, C. Ferrari, C. Benoist, G. Mars, et al.. A 2163: Merger events in the hottest Abell galaxy cluster. I. Dynamical analysis from optical data. Astronomy and Astrophysics - A&A, 2008, 481, pp.593-613. ⟨10.1051/0004-6361:20077614⟩. ⟨hal-00287036⟩
607 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More