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The Corona Borealis supercluster: connectivity, collapse, and evolution

Authors :
Einasto, Maret
Kipper, Rain
Tenjes, Peeter
Lietzen, Heidi
Tempel, Elmo
Liivamägi, Lauri Juhan
Einasto, Jaan
Tamm, Antti
Heinämäki, Pekka
Nurmi, Pasi
Source :
A&A 649, A51 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We present a study of the Corona Borealis (CB) supercluster. We determined the high-density cores of the CB and the richest galaxy clusters in them, and studied their dynamical state and galaxy content. We determined filaments in the supercluster to analyse the connectivity of clusters. We compared the mass distribution in the CB with predictions from the spherical collapse model and analysed the acceleration field in the CB. We found that at a radius $R_{\mathrm{30}}$ around clusters in the CB (A2065, A2061, A2089, and Gr2064) (corresponding to the density contrast $\Delta\rho \approx 30$), the galaxy distribution shows a minimum. The $R_{30}$ values for individual clusters lie in the range of $3 - 6$ $h^{-1}$ Mpc. The radii of the clusters (splashback radii) lie in the range of $R_{\mathrm{cl}} \approx 2 - 3$ $R_{\mathrm{vir}}$. The projected phase space diagrams and the comparison with the spherical collapse model suggest that $R_{\mathrm{30}}$ regions have passed turnaround and are collapsing. Galaxy content in clusters varies strongly. The cluster A2061 has the highest fraction of galaxies with old stellar populations, and A2065 has the highest fraction of galaxies with young stellar populations. The number of long filaments near clusters vary from one at A2089 to five at A2061. During the future evolution, the clusters in the main part of the CB may merge and form one of the largest bound systems in the nearby Universe. Another part of the CB, with the cluster Gr2064, will form a separate system. The structures with a current density contrast $\Delta\rho \approx 30$ have passed turnaround and started to collapse at redshifts $z \approx 0.3 - 0.4$. The comparison of the number and properties of the most massive collapsing supercluster cores from observations and simulations may serve as a test for cosmological models.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, references updated

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 649, A51 (2021)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2103.02326
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202040200