The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey - VIII. The Bright Galaxy Sample
J. I. Davies, S. Bianchi, L. Cortese, R. Auld, M. Baes, G. J. Bendo,, A. Boselli, L. Ciesla, M. Clemens, E. Corbelli, I. De Looze, S. di Serego, Alighieri, J. Fritz, G. Gavazzi, C. Pappalardo, M. Grossi, L. K. Hunt, S., Madden, L. Magrini, M. Pohlen, M. W. L. Smith

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel data to analyze the far-infrared properties of 78 bright Virgo cluster galaxies, revealing their luminosity distributions, dust characteristics, and mass ratios, and comparing these to field galaxies.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of Herschel Virgo Cluster data, providing detailed luminosity, dust, and mass measurements for a complete sample of bright cluster galaxies.
Findings
Luminosity distributions are peaked, not power-law.
Cluster far-infrared luminosity density is significantly lower than optical.
Most galaxies fit a single modified blackbody with mean dust temperature of 20 K.
Abstract
We describe the Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey (HeViCS) and the first data that cover the complete survey area (four 4 x 4 deg2 regions). We use these data to measure and compare the global far infrared properties of 78 optically bright galaxies that are selected at 500 \mum and detected in all five far-infrared bands. We show that our measurements and calibration are broadly consistent with previous data obtained by IRAS, ISO, Spitzer and Planck. We use SPIRE and PACS photometry data to produce 100, 160, 250, 350 and 500 \mum cluster luminosity distributions. These luminosity distributions are not power laws, but peaked, with small numbers of both faint and bright galaxies. We measure a cluster 100-500 micron far-infrared luminosity density of 1.6(7.0) \pm 0.2 x 10^9 Lsun/Mpc3. This compares to a cluster 0.4-2.5 \mum optical luminosity density of 5.0(20.0) x 10^9 Lsun/Mpc3, some…
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