The Antlia Cluster (or Abell S0636)[4] is a cluster of galaxies located in the Hydra–Centaurus Supercluster. The Antlia Cluster is the third-nearest to the Local Group after the Virgo Cluster and Fornax Cluster.[6] Antlia's distance from Earth is 40.5 megaparsecs (132.1 megalight-years) to 40.9 Mpc (133.4 Mly)[5] and can be viewed from Earth in the constellation Antlia.[5][7] The Antlia Cluster should not be confused with the Antlia Dwarf galaxy.[5]

Quick Facts Observation data (Epoch J2000), Constellation(s) ...
Antlia Cluster
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DECam Deep View of the Antlia Cluster
Observation data (Epoch J2000)
Constellation(s)Antlia
Right ascension10h 30m 03.5s[1]
Declination−35° 19 24[1]
Brightest memberNGC 3268, NGC 3258
Number of galaxies254
Richness class0[2]
Bautz–Morgan classificationI-II[2]
Velocity dispersion444–591 km/s[3]
Redshift0.0087[4]
Distance40.7 Mpc (132.7 Mly)[5]
ICM temperature~2.0 keV[4]
Binding mass~3.3×1014[3] M
X-ray luminosity3.4×1042 h75−2 erg/s (0.5-10.0 keV)[4]
Other designations
Abell S0636
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Antlia is classified as a rare Bautz–Morgan type III cluster,[4][3] meaning it has no central dominant (cD) brightest cluster galaxy.[8] However, the cluster is dominated by two massive elliptical galaxies, NGC 3268 and NGC 3258, and contains a total of about 234 galaxies.[4][5] The cluster is very dense compared to other clusters such as Virgo and Fornax, thus containing early-type galaxies and a larger portion of dwarf ellipticals.[5][7][clarification needed] The cluster is split into two galaxy groups, the Northern subgroup gravitating around NGC 3268, and the Southern subgroup centered on NGC 3258.[5]

The cluster has an overall redshift of z = 0.0087, implying that the cluster is, like most objects in the Universe, receding from the Local Group.[4] Using the now-obsolete scientific satellite ASCA, X-ray observations show that the cluster is almost isothermal, with a mean temperature of kT ~ 2.0 keV.[4]

List of named objects in the Antlia Cluster

See also

References

Further reading

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