Is the far border of the Local Void expanding?
I. Iwata (1), P. Chamaraux (2) ((1) National Astronomical, Observatory of Japan, (2) Observatoire de Paris - Meudon)

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the far border of the Local Void is expanding by measuring galaxy velocities, finding no significant evidence of systematic motion but results consistent with expected expansion velocities.
Contribution
It provides observational constraints on the expansion of the Local Void by analyzing peculiar velocities of far-side border galaxies using Tully-Fisher relation.
Findings
Average peculiar velocity of selected galaxies is not significantly different from zero.
Results are consistent with the Local Void expanding at ~260 km/s.
No conclusive evidence of systematic motion against the void's center was found.
Abstract
According to models of evolution in the hierarchical structure formation scenarios, voids of galaxies are expected to expand. The Local Void (LV) is the closest large void, and it provides a unique opportunity to test observationally such an expansion. It has been found that the Local Group, which is on the border of the LV, is running away from the void center at ~260 km/s. In this study we investigate the motion of the galaxies at the far-side border of the LV to examine the presence of a possible expansion. We selected late-type, edge-on spiral galaxies with radial velocities between 3000 km/s and 5000 km/s, and carried out HI 21 cm line and H-band imaging observations. The near-infrared Tully-Fisher relation was calibrated with a large sample of galaxies and carefully corrected for Malmquist bias. It was used to compute the distances and the peculiar velocities of the LV sample…
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