The
Virgo Supercluster (
Virgo SC) or the
Local Supercluster (
LSC or
LS) is the irregular
supercluster that contains the
Virgo Cluster in addition to the
Local Group, which in turn contains the
Milky Way and
Andromeda galaxies. At least 100
galaxy groups and
clusters are located within its diameter of 33
megaparsecs (110 million
light-years). It is one of millions of superclusters in the
observable universe.
Background
Beginning with the first large sample of
nebulae published by
William and
John Herschel in 1863, it was known that there is a marked excess of nebular fields in the constellation
Virgo (near the north
galactic pole). In the 1950s, French–American astronomer
Gérard Henri de Vaucouleurs was the first to argue that this excess represented a large-scale galaxy-like structure, coining the term "Local Supergalaxy" in 1953 which he changed to "Local Supercluster" (LSC
[2]) in 1958. (
Harlow Shapley, in his 1959 book
Of Stars and Men, suggested the term
Metagalaxy.
[3]) Debate went on during the 1960s and 1970s as to whether the Local Supercluster (LS) was actually a structure or a chance alignment of galaxies.
[4] The issue was resolved with the large redshift surveys of the late 1970s and early 1980s, which convincingly showed the flattened concentration of galaxies along the supergalactic plane.
[5]
Structure
In a comprehensive 1982 paper,
R. Brent Tully presented the conclusions of his research concerning the basic structure of the LS. It consists of two components: an appreciably flattened disk containing two-thirds of the supercluster's luminous galaxies, and a roughly spherical halo containing the remaining one-third.
[6] The disk itself is a thin (~1
Mpc) ellipsoid with a long axis / short axis ratio of at least 6 to 1, and possibly as high as 9 to 1.
[7] Data released in June 2003 from the 5-year
Two-degree-Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dF) has allowed astronomers to compare the LS to other superclusters. The LS represents a typical poor (that is, lacking a high density core) supercluster of rather small size. It has one rich galaxy cluster in the center, surrounded by filaments of galaxies and poor groups.
[1] The
Local Group is located on the outskirts of the LS in a small filament extending from the
Fornax Cluster to the
Virgo Cluster.
[5] The Virgo Supercluster's volume is very approximately 7000 times that of the Local Group or 100 billion times that of the Milky Way. See
volumes of similar orders of magnitude.
Galaxy distribution
The
number density of galaxies in the LS falls off with the square of the distance from its center near the
Virgo Cluster, suggesting that this cluster is not randomly located. Overall, the vast majority of the luminous galaxies (greater than
absolute magnitude −13) are concentrated in a small number of
clouds (groups of
galaxy clusters). Ninety-eight percent can be found in the following 11 clouds (given in decreasing order of number of luminous galaxies):
Canes Venatici,
Virgo Cluster, Virgo II (southern extension), Leo II, Virgo III, Crater (NGC 3672), Leo I, Leo Minor (NGC 2841), Draco (NGC 5907), Antlia (NGC 2997) and NGC 5643. Of the luminous galaxies located in the disk, one third are in the
Virgo Cluster, while the remainder are found in the
Canes Venatici Cloud and Virgo II Cloud, plus the somewhat insignificant NGC 5643 Group. The luminous galaxies in the halo are also concentrated in a small number of
clouds (94% in 7 clouds). This distribution indicates that "most of the volume of the supergalactic plane is a great void."
[7] A helpful analogy that matches the observed distribution is that of soap bubbles. Flattish
clusters and
superclusters are found at the intersection of bubbles, which are large, roughly spherical (on the order of 20–60
Mpc in diameter) voids in space.
[8] Long filamentary structures seem to predominate. An example of this is the
Hydra-Centaurus Supercluster, the nearest supercluster to the LS, which starts at a distance of roughly 30
Mpc and extends to 60
Mpc.
[9]
Cosmology
Large scale dynamics
Since the late 1980s it has been apparent that not only the
Local Group, but all matter out to a distance of at least 50
Mpc is experiencing a bulk flow on the order of 600 km/s in the direction of the
Norma Cluster (Abell 3627).
[10] Lynden-Bell et al. (1988) dubbed the cause of this the "
Great Attractor". While astronomers are confident of the velocity of the LS, which has been measured against the
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), the nature of what is causing it remains poorly understood.
Dark matter
The LS has a total mass
M ≈ 10
15 M☉ and a total optical luminosity
L ≈ 3
×10
12 L☉.
[1] This yields a
mass-to-light ratio of about 300 times that of the solar ratio (
M☉/
L☉ = 1), a figure that is consistent with results obtained for other superclusters.
[11][12] By comparison, the
mass-to-light ratio for the
Milky Way is 63.8 assuming a solar
absolute magnitude of 4.83,
[13] a Milky Way absolute magnitude of −20.9,
[14] and a Milky Way mass of 1.25
×10
12 M☉.
[15] These ratios are one of the main arguments in favor of the presence of large amounts of
dark matter in the universe; if dark matter did not exist, we would expect much smaller mass-to-light ratios.
Maps
The nearest galaxy groups projected onto the
supergalactic plane (click on feature names for more information)
Diagrams