Return to the Great Attractor: Strong Evidence for a Steradian-sized Flow Converging at 70 Mpc within the GA Supercluster and Aligned with the CMB Dipole

Abstract

We used the FourStar near-IR camera on Magellan-Baade to obtain high S/N H-Band imaging of 66 galaxies with radial velocities of 2000 < V < 5000 km/s. Our goal was to use the superior distance measurements of surface-brightness-fluctuations (SBF) to derive ``peculiar velocities'' to test claims that the CMB dipole anisotropy, equivalent to ≈600 km/s with respect to the Local Group, arises from a 'local' overdensity in the galaxy/dark-matter distribution -- the Great Attractor. SBF's ability to measure distances with 5% accuracy confirms a strong flow over a steradian of the sky peaking at Vpec 1000 km/s and converging to zero at D ≈70 Mpc from the Local Group. The modest spatial extent of this flow RV 5000 km/s is consistent with the original Great Attractor model (a diameter D 140 Mpc), as well as the magnitude and direction of the CMB dipole anisotropy, and the power spectrum of CMB fluctuations -- the latter two arguably the most secure measurements in astrophysics. In contrast, our results are at-odds with reports of comparable amplitude 'bulk flows' on scales of hundreds of Mpc that themselves may be inconsistent with the expected fluctuations in the CMB for a universe. We contend that only distance-estimators as accurate as SBF are able settle the question of whether the CMB dipole arises from the gravitational influence of large-scale structure within, or without 100 Mpc of the Local Group.

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