SBF distances to Hydra and Centaurus: Consequences on the Great Attractor model 1 S. 1 Mieske , M. 1 Hilker , 2 L. Infante Sternwarte der Universit ät Bonn, Germany 2Departamento de Astronomı́a y Astrofı́sica, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Peculiar velocities towards Hydra/Centaurus In the past few years, a lot of effort has been put into a precise determination of cosmological parameters. The accuracy in determining the Hubble constant H0 is approaching 5%. This enormous improvement in precision has the consequence that deviations from an undisturbed Hubble flow can also be determined to a higher precision. This is of special importance for the Hydra-Centaurus region, as high peculiar velocities have been measured towards this direction (LyndenBell et al. 1988, Tonry et al. 2000, T00 in the following), leading to the proposal of a massive “Great At16 tractor” (' 10 M∗)at a distance of about 40-50 Mpc, slightly behind the Centaurus cluster. the following) model by T00, who had not included distances to the Hydra cluster in their flow analysis. The SBF measurements for both Hydra and Centaurus come from deep VLT-FORS1 imaging in the I band of seven fields in the central region of each cluster. See Fig.1 for the location of the investigated galaxies. Fig.2 summarizes the results of our SBF distance measurements. We only include distances of galaxies within the empirically well calibrated range of 1.0 < (V − I) < 1.3 mag into the subsequent analysis. We also indicate the mean distance obtained when restricting the Hydra sample to the same absolute magnitude range than the Centaurus sample, denoted as luminosity restricted Hydra sample in the following. The mean distance to Hydra is 33.03 ± 0.07 mag, to Centaurus it is 33.17 ± 0.12 mag, yielding (m − M )Cen − (m − M )Hyd = 0.14 ± 0.14 mag. For the luminosity restricted Hydra sample we get 33.16 ± 0.06 mag, yielding (m − M )Cen − (m − M )Hyd = 0.01 ± 0.13 mag. angular region centered on Hydra of about 5 degrees radius (4 Mpc) is allowed. For a 10% higher GA distance, the diameter of this region almost doubles. For 20% higher distance (not shown in the plot), the allowed region remains the same. The distance of 42.9 Mpc to the luminosity restricted Hydra sample cannot be accomodated for a GA at 43 Mpc, only for a 10% higher GA distance. Fig.1: DSS images of the central Centaurus cluster (left) and Hydra cluster (right) with the investigated galaxies indicated. The images have a 20 arcminutes sidelength. 1.3 1.2 Fig.3: Mean CMB radial velocity plotted vs. mean SBF distance modulus for Hydra (blue) and Centaurus (red). Radial velocities come from Christlein&Zabludoff (2003) and Stein et al. (1998), respectively. The lines indicate the Hubble flow for different values of H0. The filled green circle gives the Hydra distance when excluding dwarfs with MV > −15 mag. 1.1 1 0.9 -22 -20 Is the Great Attractor really that attractive? -18 -16 -14 32 32.5 33 33.5 34 32 32.5 33 33.5 34 Fig.2: SBF distances for the investigated galaxies in Hydra (left panels) and Centaurus (right panels) plotted vs. V-I (top) and MV (bottom). The bottom plots include only galaxies within the empirically calibrated colour range 1.0 < V − I < 1.3 mag. This range is indicated in the top plots by dashed horizontal lines. The vertical lines in the bottom plots indicate the mean distance (solid line) and its 1σ uncertainty (dashed lines). The green vertical line gives the mean Hydra distance when excluding dwarfs with MV > −15 mag. SBF distances to Hydra/Centaurus We present new SBF-distances to 16 early type galaxies in Hydra (Mieske, Hilker& Infante 2004, submitted) and revised distances to 15 galaxies in Centaurus (from Mieske & Hilker 2003). These new distances are used to test the spherical Great Attractor (GA in Fig. 3 shows that our distance value to the Centaurus cluster implies a quite small peculiar velocity of only about 200 km/s. Our low peculiar velocity for Centaurus implies that either the GA is much less massive than estimated by Tonry et al. or that the Centaurus cluster falls into it almost perpendicular to the line of sight. The fact that for the Hydra cluster we do find a quite large peculiar velocity of about 1000 km/s (see Fig. 3) implies that the second possibility holds: there is a massive Great Attractor, but closer to the projected position of Hydra than to Centaurus. To quantify this shift, we indicate a series of projected GA positions in Fig. 4 for which we show the expected CMB velocities of Hydra and Centaurus. These are calculated from the flow model of T00, only varying the projected position of the GA. From Fig. 4 it is clear that at the original position of the GA determined by Tonry et al., the measured distances and CMB velocities of Hydra and Centaurus cannot be accomodated. In case of a GA distance of 43 Mpc, an Fig.4: Top: Positions in super-galactic coordinates of the indicated objects. The Centaurus and Hydra distances are from this presentation. Crosses indicate assumed projected positions of the GA for which the expected CMB radial velocities of Hydra and Centaurus are shown in the bottom panels. The dashed circles delimit the allowed region for a GA at 43 Mpc and 47.5 Mpc distance, respectively. Bottom: CMB radial velocities expected from the flow model by Tonry et al. (2000) for the different GA positions as indicated in Fig. 4. Left panel: GA distance=43 Mpc. Right panel: GA distance=47.5 Mpc. Red symbols: expected CMB velocity for the Centaurus cluster at (m-M)=33.17 mag. Blue symbols: expected CMB radial velocities for Hydra at (m-M)=33.03 mag. Green symbols: expected CMB radial velocities for the distance of (m-M)=33.16 mag to the luminosity restricted Hydra sample. Blue horizontal lines: CMB velocity of the Hydra cluster. Red horizontal lines: CMB velocity of the Centaurus cluster. Conclusions Our SBF-distances to the Hydra and Centaurus cluster confirm the presence of a massive Great Attractor in the Hydra-Centaurus region, at a distance of about 45 Mpc. They imply that the GA be closer to the Hydra than to the Centaurus cluster in projected position, at least 10-15 degrees (7-10 Mpc) away from the GA position estimated by Tonry et al. (2000), who had not included the Hydra cluster in their flow analysis. Acknowledgements We thank the ESO User Support Group for carrying out the DDT spectroscopy (program 273.B-5008xs) in service mode. SM was supported by DAAD Ph.D. grant D/01/35298 and DFG Projekt Nr. HI 855/1-1. LI acknowledges support from ”proyecto Fondap # 15010003”
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