Astronomy: Coma Cluster

Astronomy: Coma Cluster
Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA
Coma Cluster The Coma Cluster (Abell 1656) is a large cluster of galaxies that contains over 1,000 identified galaxies. Along with the Leo Cluster (Abell 1367), it is one of the two major clusters comprising the Coma Supercluster.

Commentary

Commentary

Coma Cluster The Coma Cluster (Abell 1656) is a large cluste r of galaxies that contains over 1,000 identified galaxies. Along with the Leo Cluster (Abell 1367), it is one of the two major clusters comprising the Coma Supercluster. It is located in and takes its name from the constellation Coma Berenices.

Commentary

Why Coma Cluster matters: Galaxies are the fundamental building blocks of the visible universe. Studying them reveals how matter organized itself after the Big Bang and continues to evolve billions of years later. It is one of the first galaxy clusters that was remarked upon in the astronomy literature, being visually noted by William Herschel in 1785 and photographically surveyed by Max Wolf in 1901. The cluster's mean distance from Earth is 99 Mpc (321 million light years). Its ten brightest spiral galaxies have apparent magnitudes of 12–14 that are observable with amateur telescopes larger than 20 cm. The central region is dominated by two supergiant elliptical galaxies: NGC 4874 and NGC 4889. The cluster is within a few degrees of the north galactic pole on the sky. Most of the galaxies that inhabit the central portion of the Coma Cluster are ellipticals. Both dwarf and giant ellipticals are found in abundance in the Coma Cluster.

Commentary

Deep dive: Coma Cluster The cluster's mean distance from Earth is 99 Mpc (321 million light years). Its ten brightest spiral ga laxies have apparent magnitudes of 12–14 that are observable with amateur telescopes larger than 20 cm. The central region is dominated by two supergiant elliptical galaxies: NGC 4874 and NGC 4889. The cluster is within a few degrees of the north galactic pole on the sky. Most of the galaxies that inhabit the central portion of the Coma Cluster are ellipticals. Both dwarf and giant ellipticals are found in abundance in the Coma Cluster. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coma_Cluster (Wikipedia, CC BY-SA)