The nature of the nearest compact group of galaxies from precise distance measurements
Gary A. Mamon

TL;DR
This study uses precise distance measurements to determine that the nearest compact galaxy group in Virgo is actually a chance alignment of galaxies rather than a truly dense, gravitationally bound system.
Contribution
It provides the first direct analysis confirming that a compact galaxy group is a chance alignment, not a physically dense structure, using surface brightness fluctuation distances.
Findings
The compact group is a chance alignment of galaxies.
NGC 4638 is at least 800 kpc further away than M59 and NGC 4660.
M60 is over 1 Mpc more distant than the M59+NGC 4660 pair.
Abstract
Compact groups (CGs) of galaxies, similar to those catalogued by Hickson, appear to be the densest galaxy structures in the Universe. Redshift information is insufficient to determine whether a CG is roughly as dense in 3D as it appears in projection, or whether it is caused by a chance alignment (CA) along the line of sight within a larger galaxy system. Recent precise distance measurements help probe the nature of the nearest CG, situated in the Virgo cluster, whose dominant member is M60. The isolated status of the CG is reassessed with recent photometry and a statistical analysis is performed on the surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) distances measured by Mei et al. in Virgo, for 4 of the 5 CG members. The neighboring galaxy NGC 4606 appears (with 80-90% confidence) to be too faint to affect the isolated status of the CG. Taken at face value, the SBF distances suggest that M59 and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
