The First Galaxy Cluster Discovered by the VISTA Variables in the V\'ia L\'actea Survey

Abstract

We report the first confirmed detection of the galaxy cluster VVV-J144321-611754 at very low latitudes (l = 315.836, b = -1.650) located in the tile d015 of the VISTA Variables in the V\'ia L\'actea (VVV) survey. We defined the region of 30× 30 arcmin2 centered in the brightest galaxy finding 25 galaxies. For these objects, extinction-corrected median colors of (H - Ks) = 0.34 0.05 mag, (J - H) = 0.57 0.08 mag and (J - Ks) = 0.87 0.06 mag, and R1/2 = 1.59 0.16 arcsec; C = 3.01 0.08; and Sersic index, n = 4.63 0.39 were estimated. They were visually confirmed showing characteristics of early-type galaxies in the near-IR images. An automatic clustering analysis performed in the whole tile found that the concentration of galaxies VVV-J144321-611754 is a real, compact concentration of early-type galaxies. Assuming a typical galaxy cluster with low X-ray luminosity, the photometric redshift of the brightest galaxy is z = 0.196 0.025. Follow-up near-IR spectroscopy with FLAMINGOS-2 at the Gemini-South telescope revealed that the two brighter cluster galaxies have typical spectra of early-type galaxies and the estimated redshift for the brightest galaxy VVV-J144321.06-611753.9 is z = 0.2340.022 and for VVV-J144319.02-611746.1 is z = 0.2320.019. Finally, these galaxies clearly follow the cluster Red Sequence in the rest-frame near-IR color--magnitude diagram with the slope similar to galaxy cluster at redshift of 0.2. These results are consistent with the presence of a bona fide galaxy cluster beyond the Milky Way disk.

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