English

The North Ecliptic Pole Supercluster

Astrophysics 2009-11-06 v1

Abstract

We have used the ROSAT All-Sky Survey to detect a known supercluster at z=0.087 in the North Ecliptic Pole region. The X-ray data greatly improve our understanding of this supercluster's characteristics, approximately doubling our knowledge of the structure's spatial extent and tripling the cluster/group membership compared to the optical discovery data. The supercluster is a rich structure consisting of at least 21 galaxy clusters and groups, 12 AGN, 61 IRAS galaxies, and various other objects. A majority of these components were discovered with the X-ray data, but the supercluster is also robustly detected in optical, IR, and UV wavebands. Extending 129 x 102 x 67 (1/h50 Mpc)^3, the North Ecliptic Pole Supercluster has a flattened shape oriented nearly edge-on to our line-of-sight. Owing to the softness of the ROSAT X-ray passband and the deep exposure over a large solid angle, we have detected for the first time a significant population of X-ray emitting galaxy groups in a supercluster. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of X-ray observations with contiguous coverage for studying structure in the Universe.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.astro-ph/0103202,
  title  = {The North Ecliptic Pole Supercluster},
  author = {C. R. Mullis and J. P. Henry and I. M. Gioia and H. Boehringer and U. G. Briel and W. Voges and J. P. Huchra},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/0103202},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal; 5 pages with 2 embedded figures; uses emulateapj.sty; For associated animations, see http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~mullis/nep3d.html; A high-resolution color postscript version of the full paper is available at http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~mullis/papers/nepsc.ps.gz