Astronomy:SPT-CL J2106-5844

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Short description: Galaxy in the constellation Indus

SPT-CLJ2106-5844 is a galaxy cluster located 7.5 billion light years from Earth. It was discovered by scientists from the South Pole Telescope Collaboration, using the South Pole Telescope. With a weight of about 1.27 × 1015 solar masses, it is the most massive distant object known, as of 2011. It is about 60% heavier than previously known object detected in 2008, SPT-CL J0546-5345.[1][2]

This galaxy cluster was found in the South Pole Telescope Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SPT-SZ) survey. This survey was done using the Advanced Camera for Surveys and Wide Field Camera 3 on the Hubble Space Telescope. There have been many observations completed in x-ray and infrared imaging to discover new observations about this massive cluster. Like how the central dump is resolved into two different substructures -northwestern and southeastern- which are separated by a distance of ~150 kpc. This distance is immense, considering the distance from Earth to the Galactic Center is only 7-10 kpc. To put this in perspective, the Milky Way galaxy could fit 20 times between these two substructures, the actual diameter of 'SPT-CLJ2106' is much bigger than just this gap[3]

The cluster has a redshift of z=1.132.[4]

References

  1. "Antarctica Telescope Finds Most Massive Distant Object -1000 Times Mass of Milky Way". The Daily Galaxy. 2011-04-12. http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2011/04/antarctic-telescope-finds-most-massive-distant-object-ever-13-trillion-xs-mass-of-milky-way.html. 
  2. Foley, R. J.; Andersson, K.; Bazin, G.; de Haan, T. et al. (20 April 2011). "DISCOVERY AND COSMOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS OF SPT-CL J2106-5844, THE MOST MASSIVE KNOWN CLUSTER AT z>1". The Astrophysical Journal 731 (2): 86. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/731/2/86. Bibcode2011ApJ...731...86F. 
  3. Kim, Jinhyub; Jee, M. James; Perlmutter, Saul; Hayden, Brian; Rubin, David; Huang, Xiaosheng; Aldering, Greg; Ko, Jongwan (2019-10-10). "Precise Mass Determination of SPT-CL J2106-5844, the Most Massive Cluster at z>1". The Astrophysical Journal (Cornell University) 887 (1): 76. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ab521e. Bibcode2019ApJ...887...76K. 
  4. Reichardt, Christian (2011-01-11). "SPT SZ Observations". Planck conference. http://www.ias.u-psud.fr/planck_2011/Presentations_pdf/11012011_PM_tuesday/22_plank2011_reichardt.pdf. 
Preceded by
SPT-CL J0546-5345
Most massive
distant (z~>=1)
galaxy cluster

2011 – 
Succeeded by
current