7,800 research outputs found

    Abell 3560, a galaxy cluster at the edge of a major merging event

    Get PDF
    In this paper we study A3560, a rich cluster at the southern periphery of the A3558 complex, a chain of interacting clusters in the central part of the Shapley Concentration supercluster. From a ROSAT-PSPC map we find that the X-ray surface brightness distribution of A3560 is well described by two components, an elliptical King law and a more peaked and fainter structure, which has been modeled with a Gaussian. The main component, corresponding to the cluster, is elongated with the major axis pointing toward the A3558 complex. The second component, centered on the Dumb-bell galaxy which dominates the cluster, appears significantly offset (by about 0.15 Mpc) from the cluster X-ray centroid. From a Beppo-SAX observation we derive the radial temperature profile, finding that the temperature is constant (at kT~3.7 keV) up to 8 arcmin, corresponding to 0.3 Mpc: for larger distances, the temperature significantly drops to kT~1.7 keV. We analyze also temperature maps, dividing the cluster in 4 sectors and deriving the temperature profiles in each sector: we find that the temperature drop is more sudden in the sectors which point towards the A3558 complex. From VLA radio data, at 20 and 6 cm, we find a peculiar bright extended radio source (J1332-3308), composed by a core (centered on the northern component of the Dumb-bell galaxy), two lobes, a "filament" and a diffuse component. The morphology of the source could be interpreted either with a strong interaction of the radio source with the intracluster medium or with the model of intermittency of the central engine.Comment: 8 pages with encapsulated figures, A&A in pres

    Interacting clusters and their environment

    Full text link
    Central regions of superclusters are the ideal places where to study cluster merging phenomena: in fact the accretion activity is enhanced, as predicted by the cosmological simulations. In this paper I review the case-study of the Shapley Concentration, aimed to understand the effect of major mergings on the intracluster medium and the galaxy population of the involved clusters.Comment: Invited talk IAU Colloquium 195 - "Outskirts of Galaxy Clusters: intense life in the suburbs". The figures here are available only in jpeg forma

    XMM-Newton observation of the interacting cluster Abell 3528

    Full text link
    We analyze the XMM dataset of the interacting cluster of galaxies Abell 3528 located westward in the core of the Shapley Supercluster, the largest concentration of mass in the nearby Universe. A3528 is formed by two interacting clumps (A3528-N at North and A3528-S at South) separated by 0.9 h701h_{70}^{-1} Mpc at redshift 0.053. XMM data describe these clumps as relaxed structure with an overall temperature of 4.14±0.094.14 \pm 0.09 and 4.29±0.074.29 \pm 0.07 keV in A3528-N and A3528-S, respectively, and a core cooler by a factor 1.4--1.5 and super-solar metal abundance in the inner 30 arcsec. These clumps are connected by a X-ray soft, bridge-like emission and present asymmetric surface brightness with significant excess in the North--West region of A3528-N and in the North--East area of A3528-S. However, we do not observe any evidence of shock heated gas, both in the surface brightness and in the temperature map. Considering also that the optical light distribution is more concentrated around A3528-N and makes A3528-S barely detectable, we do not find support to the originally suggested head-on pre-merging scenario and conclude that A3528 is in a off-axis post-merging phase, where the closest cores encounter happened about 1--2 Gyrs ago.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures (10 in colors), accepted for publication on A&A. For a Poscript version with high resolution figures see http://www.mi.iasf.cnr.it/~gasta/www/a3528.htm

    New Structure In The Shapley Supercluster

    Get PDF
    We present new radial velocities for 189 galaxies in a 91 sq. deg region of the Shapley supercluster measured with the FLAIR-II spectrograph on the UK Schmidt Telescope. The data reveal two sheets of galaxies linking the major concentrations of the supercluster. The supercluster is not flattened in Declination as was suggested previously and it may be at least 30 percent larger than previously thought with a correspondingly larger contribution to the motion of the Local Group.Comment: LaTex: 2 pages, 1 figure, includes conf_iap.sty style file. To appear in proceedings of The 14th IAP Colloquium: Wide Field Surveys in Cosmology, held in Paris, 1998 May 26--30, eds. S.Colombi, Y.Mellie

    Follow up a lungo termine dopo chirurgia conservativa per il tumore del testicolo a cellule di Leydig

    Get PDF
    Il tumore del testicolo a cellule di Leydig nella maggior parte dei casi è benigno, nonostante questo l'orchiectomia radicale è considerata la terapia standard. E' stato analizzato retrospettivamente il follow up a lungo termine di una serie di pazienti con tumore del testicolo a cellule di Leydig, trattati elettivamente con la chirurgia conservativa. Tra il novembre del 1990 e il dicembre del 2005, 17 pazienti sono stati sottoposti a chirurgia su base elettiva previa valutazione pre-operatoria, che includeva esame obbiettivo, markers sierici per tumori a cellule germinali, ecografia scrotale, TC addome, Rx del torace e profilo ormonale. La chirurgia conservativa del testicolo è stata eseguita per via inguinale con clampaggio del funicolo spermatico ed esecuzione dell'esame estemporaneo del campione, che si è rivelato utile al fine della diagnosi. Il follow up successivo includeva gli esami precedentemente elencati, eseguiti ogni sei mesi,per i primi due anni, infine annualmente, valutando la recidiva tumorale e la sopravvivenza. I risultati dello studio hanno evidenziato che la chirurgia conservativa del testicolo, affiancata dall'esame estemporaneo, prevede un'eccellente risultato oncologico a lungo termine (con una media di 91 mesi), poichè non è stata documentata nessuna recidiva

    A substructure analysis of the A3558 cluster complex

    Get PDF
    The "algorithm driven by the density estimate for the identification of clusters" (DEDICA, Pisani 1993, 1996) is applied to the A3558 cluster complex in order to find substructures. This complex, located at the center of the Shapley Concentration supercluster, is a chain formed by the ACO clusters A3556, A3558 and A3562 and the two poor clusters SC 1327-312 and SC 1329-313. We find a large number of clumps, indicating that strong dynamical processes are active. In particular, it is necessary to use a fully three-dimensional sample(i.e. using the galaxy velocity as third coordinate) in order to recover also the clumps superimposed along the line of sight. Even if a great number of detected substructures were already found in a previous analysis (Bardelli et al. 1998), this method is more efficient and faster when compared with the use of a wide battery of tests and permits the direct estimate of the detection significance. Almost all subclusters previously detected by the wavelet analyses found in the literature are recognized by DEDICA. On the basis of the substructure analysis, we also briefly discuss the origin of the A3558 complex by comparing two hypotheses: 1) the structure is a cluster-cluster collision seen just after the first core-core encounter; 2) this complex is the result of a series of incoherent group-group and cluster-group mergings, focused in that region by the presence of the surrounding supercluster. We studied the fraction of blue galaxies in the detected substructures and found that the bluest groups reside between A3562 and A3558, i.e. in the expected position in the scenario of the cluster-cluster collision.Comment: 10 pages with 12 encapsulated figures; MNRAS in pres
    corecore