A giant protocluster of galaxies at redshift 5.7
Date
Authors
Jiang, Linhua
Wu, Jin
Bian, Fuyan
Chiang, Yi-Kuan
Ho, Luis C.
Shen, Yue
Zheng, Zhen-Ya
Bailey III, J. I.
Blanc, Guillermo A.
Crane, J.D
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Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
Galaxy clusters trace the largest structures of the Universe
and provide ideal laboratories for studying galaxy evolution
and cosmology1,2
. Clusters with extended X-ray emission
have been discovered at redshifts of up to z ≈ 2.5 (refs 3–7
).
Meanwhile, there has been growing interest in hunting for protoclusters, the progenitors of clusters, at higher redshifts8–14.
It is, however, very challenging to find the largest protoclusters at early times, when they start to assemble. Here, we
report a giant protocluster of galaxies at z ≈ 5.7, when the
Universe was only one billion years old. This protocluster
occupies a volume of about 353
cubic comoving megaparsecs.
It is embedded in an even larger overdense region with at
least 41 spectroscopically confirmed, luminous Lyα-emitting
galaxies (Lyα emitters, or LAEs), including several previously
reported LAEs9
. Its LAE density is 6.6 times the average density at z ≈ 5.7. It is the only one of its kind in an LAE survey in
4 deg2
on the sky. Such a large structure is also rarely seen in
current cosmological simulations. This protocluster will collapse into a galaxy cluster with a mass of (3.6 ± 0.9) × 1015
solar masses, comparable to those of the most massive clusters or protoclusters known so far.
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Nature Astronomy
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2037-12-31
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