Dorado Group

Galaxy cluster in the constellation Dorado


title: "Dorado Group" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["dorado-group", "dorado", "southern-supercluster"] description: "Galaxy cluster in the constellation Dorado" topic_path: "general/dorado-group" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorado_Group" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Galaxy cluster in the constellation Dorado ::

| name = Dorado Group | image = [[Image:Sig05-013 small.jpg|300px]] | caption = NGC 1566, one of the brightest members of the Dorado Group (Spitzer Space Telescope image) | epoch = J2000 | ra = {{Citation | title=NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database | work=Results for Dorado Group and various galaxies | url=http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/ | access-date=2008-06-26}} | dec = | constellation = Dorado | member_no = 46 plus 34 candidate members | brightest_member = NGC 1566 | other_names = Shk 18, G16, HG3,{{citation | title = The Dwarf Galaxy Population of the Dorado Group Down to MV~−11 |author1=Carrasco, Eleazar R. |author2=Mendes de Oliveira, Cláudia |author3=Infante, Leopoldo |author4=Bolte, Michael | journal = The Astronomical Journal | volume = 121 | issue = 1 | pages = 148–168 | date = January 2001 | bibcode = 2001AJ....121..148C | doi = 10.1086/318035 |arxiv = astro-ph/0010076 |s2cid=1348985 }} MC13, and NGC 1566 Group The Dorado Group is a loose concentration of galaxies containing both spirals and ellipticals. It is generally considered a 'galaxy group' but may approach the size of a 'galaxy cluster'. It lies primarily in the southern constellation Dorado and is one of the richest galaxy groups of the Southern Hemisphere. Gérard de Vaucouleurs was the first to identify it in 1975 as a large complex nebulae II in the Dorado region, designating it as G16.

Characteristics

A rough distance estimate from NGC 1549 (using the Hubble constant as 70) put the cluster at 18.4 megaparsecs (Mpc). The Cepheid distance estimate from Freedman et al. 2001 is 15.3 Mpc.{{citation | bibcode = 2007MNRAS.378.1036E | title = Searches for ultracompact dwarf galaxies in galaxy groups | doi = 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.11856.x | date = July 2007 | journal = Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | volume = 378 | issue = 3 | pages = 1036–1042 |author1=Evstigneeva, E. A. |author2=Drinkwater, M. J. |author3=Jurek, R. |author4=Firth, P. |author5=Jones, J. B. |author6=Gregg, M. D. |author7=Phillipps, S. | doi-access = free |arxiv = 0704.1750 | s2cid = 15880069 }} Based upon the 2001 work of Tonry et al. the surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) of six member galaxies was averaged and adjusted to estimate the group's distance at in 2007.

At the center of the cluster lie interacting galaxies NGC 1549 and NGC 1553. The dominant group members, ordered by luminosity, are: spiral NGC 1566, lenticular NGC 1553, and elliptical NGC 1549. The group spans an area of the sky 10° square, corresponding to an actual area of around 3 Mpc square. The group exhibits a relatively small harmonic mean radius (230 ± 40 kpc) due to the concentration at its core of more luminous galaxies. All together, the group has an overall luminosity of 7.8 ± 1.6 L.

The Dorado Group contains three dominant smaller groups within itself, NGC 1672 Group, NGC 1566 Group and the NGC 1433 Group, as evidenced by the H I distribution of the region. The Dorado Group is in the Fornax Wall that connects these three groups.{{citation | bibcode = 2005MNRAS.356...77K | title = A Wide-Field Hi Study of the NGC 1566 Group | date = January 2005 | journal = Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | volume = 356 | issue = 1 | pages = 77–88 | doi = 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.08450.x |author1= Virginia A. Kilborn |author2=Bärbel S. Koribalski |author3=Duncan A. Forbes |author4=David G. Barnes |author5=Ruth C. Musgrave | doi-access = free |arxiv = astro-ph/0409743 }} Due to its location in the Fornax Wall, the group is at a similar distance as the Fornax Cluster.{{Citation |author1=DeGraaff, Regina Barber |author2=Blakeslee, John P. |author3=Meurer, Gerhardt R. |author4=Putman, Mary E. | title = A Galaxy in Transition: Structure, Globular Clusters, and Distance of the Star-Forming S0 Galaxy NGC 1533 in Dorado | journal = The Astrophysical Journal | date = December 2007 | volume = 671 | issue = 2 | pages = 1624–1639 | bibcode = 2007ApJ...671.1624D | doi = 10.1086/523640 |arxiv=0710.0893|s2cid=14312626 }} The Dorado Group is richer than the Local Group, while still being dominated by disk types of galaxies (i.e. its two brightest members are spiral NGC 1566 and lenticular NGC 1553) and its member galaxies have H I masses on par with non-interacting galaxies of the same morphological type. With the group's apparent crossing time being 12.6 ± 0.6 % of the universe's age, recent analyses deduce that the group is unvirialized, and thus this may explain the abundance of spirals and H I.

Members

The table below lists eighteen galaxies that were identified in 1982 as associated with the Dorado Group by John Peter Huchra and Margaret J. Geller with the ones later dropped struck out. In 1989, the list of members was expanded to 46 by Maia, da Costa, & Latham. In 1990–1991, Henry C. Ferguson and Allan Sandage identified 34 other possible candidate members of the group with magnitudes greater than 19 and eliminated one member from Maia et al. putting the list at 79 galaxies. Kilborn et al. 2005 confirmed 26 members from the list. In 2006, the list was refined again by Firth et al. Using redshift data, they excluded eleven (as being background galaxies or interloper) from the Ferguson et al. list, confirmed the membership of twenty on the list, and left 48 unconfirmed.

::data[format=table title="'''Huchra et al. 1982 Members of the Dorado Group
(with strikeouts for ones dropped by Maia et al. in 1989)'''"]

NameTypeR.A. (J2000)Dec. (J2000)Redshift (km/s)Apparent Magnitude
NGC 2082SAB(rs+)c1184 ± 612.6
NGC 1947S0− pec1100 ± 2411.7
NGC 1796(R)SB(r)dm:1014 ± 912.9
NGC 1688SB(rs)dm1228 ± 612.6
NGC 1672(R'_1:)SB(r)bc Sy21331 ± 310.3
IC 2056SAB(r)b1133 ± 1012.5
NGC 1559SB(s)cd1304 ± 411.0
NGC 1543(R)SB(l)001176 ± 711.5
NGC 1574SA0−1050 ± 2511.4
NGC 1533(L)SB(rs)00790 ± 511.7
NGC 1546SA0+?1284 ± 1411.8
NGC 1553SA(rl)001080 ± 1110.3
NGC 1549E0−11220 ± 1510.7
NGC 1566(R'_1)SAB(rs)bcSy11504 ± 210.3
NGC 1617(R')SAB(rs)a1063 ± 2111.4
NGC 1515SAB(s)bc1175 ± 712.1
NGC 1705SA0− pec633 ± 612.8
NGC 1596SA0: sp1510 ± 812.1
::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3f/NGC_1487_HST.jpg" caption="access-date=1 February 2016}}"] ::

The Maia et al. 1989 thirty-four added members were: IC 2049, NGC 1536, IC 2058, IC 2032, NGC 1602, NGC 1581, IC 2085, NGC 1522, PGC 15149, NGC 1556, NGC 1527, NGC 1494, NGC 1493, PGC 14416, IC 2000, NGC 1483, NGC 1433, PGC 14078, NGC 1495, NGC 1510, NGC 1512, IC 1959, IC 1986, NGC 1448, NGC 1487, IC 1933, NGC 1311, IC 1954, IC 1914, NGC 1411, IC 1970, PGC 13818, NGC 1249, and PGC 11139. And the six dropped from the 1982 list were: NGC 2082, NGC 1947, NGC 1796, NGC 1688, NGC 1672, and NGC 1559. In 2007, a study of ultracompact dwarfs (UCD) identified one definite and two possible UCD members of the group. The thirty-four added by Ferguson et al. 1990 included IC 2038 and IC 2039.

The NGC 1566 Group of Dorado contains H I with MHI = 3.5 M⊙ of which 40% alone comes from the NGC 1566 galaxy. More than half of its members are outside its virial radius of 580 kpc which suggests this group is a young non-virialized group. The 2005 Kilborn et al. set of confirmed NGC 1566 Group members (within the Dorado Group) is: ::data[format=table title="'''Kilborn et al. 2005 Members of the NGC 1566 Group'''"]

NameTypeR.A. (J2000)Dec. (J2000)Redshift (km/s)Apparent Magnitude
IC 2049SAB(s)d?1469 ± 714.5
NGC 1536SB(s)c pec1217 ± 1313.2
NGC 1543(R)SB(l)001176 ± 711.5
LSBG F157-081Irregular1215 ± 716.7
NGC 1533(L)SB(rs)00790 ± 511.7
IC 2038Sd pec712 ± 5215.5
APMBGC 157+016+068Irregular1350 ± 416.3
NGC 1546SA0+?1284 ± 1411.8
IC 2058Sc1379 ± 113.9
IC 2032IAB(s)m pec1068 ± 714.7
NGC 1566(R'_1)SAB(rs)bcSy11504 ± 210.3
NGC 1596SA0: sp1510 ± 812.1
NGC 1602IB(s)m pec1568 ± 813.3
NGC 1515SAB(s)bc1175 ± 712.1
NGC 1522(R')S00: pec898 ± 713.9
ESO 118-019S00 pec123914.9
ESO 157-030E41471 ± 2814.7
ESO 157-047S0/a? pec sp1655 ± 1015.5
ESO 157-049S?1678 ± 514.3
IC 2085S00 pec sp982 ± 1013.9
NGC 1549E0−11220 ± 1510.7
NGC 1553SA(rl)001080 ± 1110.3
NGC 1574SA0−1050 ± 2511.4
NGC 1581S0−1600 ± 2713.6
NGC 1617(R')SAB(rs)a1063 ± 2111.4
Abell 3202Irregular1135 ± 4016.9
::

References

References

  1. (July 1990). "Population studies in groups and clusters of galaxies. III – A catalog of galaxies in five nearby groups". Astronomical Journal.
  2. (December 2006). "The Near-infrared S0 Survey III: Morphology of 15 Southern Early-Type Disk Galaxies". The Astronomical Journal.
  3. (2001). "The SBF Survey of Galaxy Distances. IV. SBF Magnitudes, Colors, and Distances". Astrophysical Journal.
  4. (April 1990). "Globular clusters in the interacting galaxies NGC 1549 and NGC 1553". Astronomical Journal.
  5. (November 2006). "Kinematics, substructure and luminosity-weighted dynamics of six nearby galaxy groups". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
  6. (June 15, 1982). "Groups of galaxies. I – Nearby groups". Astrophysical Journal.
  7. "One from many".
  8. (April 1989). "A catalog of southern groups of galaxies". Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series.

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