Large-scale filamentary structures around the Virgo cluster revisited
Suk Kim, Soo-Chang Rey, Martin Bureau, Hyein Yoon, Aeree Chung, Helmut, Jerjen, Thorsten Lisker, Hyunjin Jeong, Eon-Chang Sung, Youngdae Lee, Woong, Lee, and Jiwon Chung

TL;DR
This study revisits galaxy filamentary structures around the Virgo cluster using an expanded dataset, confirming known filaments, identifying new ones, and analyzing their infall patterns to understand cluster formation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed mapping of large-scale filaments around Virgo, including new structures and infall evidence, enhancing understanding of galaxy cluster build-up.
Findings
Confirmed seven known filaments around Virgo.
Identified a new filament toward NGC 5353/4.
Observed infall patterns consistent with hierarchical structure formation.
Abstract
We revisit the filamentary structures of galaxies around the Virgo cluster, exploiting a larger dataset based on the HyperLeda database than previous studies. In particular, this includes a large number of low-luminosity galaxies, resulting in better sampled individual structures. We confirm seven known structures in the distance range 4~~Mpc~ SGY~ 16~ Mpc, now identified as filaments, where SGY is the axis of the supergalactic coordinate system roughly along the line of sight. The Hubble diagram of the filament galaxies suggests they are infalling toward the main-body of the Virgo cluster. We propose that the collinear distribution of giant elliptical galaxies along the fundamental axis of the Virgo cluster is smoothly connected to two of these filaments (Leo~II~A and B). Behind the Virgo cluster (16~~Mpc~ SGY~ 27~~Mpc), we also identify a…
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