Ophiuchus: an optical view of a very massive cluster of galaxies hidden behind the Milky Way
Florence Durret, Ken-ichi Wakamatsu, Takahiro Nagayama, Christophe, Adami, Andrea Biviano

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed optical analysis of the Ophiuchus galaxy cluster, revealing its relaxed dynamical state and mass, despite its obscuration by the Milky Way, and highlights its mostly red galaxy population.
Contribution
First comprehensive optical investigation of the obscured Ophiuchus cluster, including galaxy magnitudes, redshifts, and dynamical analysis, revealing its relaxed state and mass.
Findings
Cluster mass estimated at 1.1x10^15 solar masses
Dominance of red, non-star-forming galaxies
Evidence of a main structure with a minor substructure
Abstract
The Ophiuchus cluster, at a redshift z=0.0296, is known from X-rays to be one of the most massive nearby clusters, but due to its very low Galactic latitude its optical properties have not been investigated in detail. We discuss the optical properties of the galaxies in the Ophiuchus cluster, in particular with the aim of understanding better its dynamical properties. We have obtained deep optical imaging in several bands with various telescopes, and applied a sophisticated method to model and subtract the contributions of stars in order to measure galaxy magnitudes as accurately as possible. The colour-magnitude relations obtained show that there are hardly any blue galaxies in Ophiuchus (at least brighter than r'<=19.5), and this is confirmed by the fact that we only detect two galaxies in Halpha. We also obtained a number of spectra with ESO-FORS2, that we combined with previously…
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