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Supergalactic coordinate system

 

Supergalactic coordinate system

Supergalactic coordinates are coordinates in a spherical coordinate system which was designed to have its equator aligned with the supergalactic plane, a major structure in the local universe formed by the preferential distribution of nearby galaxy clusters (such as the Virgo cluster, the Great Attractor and the Pisces-Perseus supercluster) towards a (two-dimensional) plane. The supergalactic plane was recognized by Gerald de Vaucouleurs in 1953 from the the Shapley-Ames catalogue, although a flattened distribution of nebulae had been noted by William Herschel over 200 years earlier.

By convention, supergalactic latitude and supergalactic longitude are usually denoted by SGB and SGL, respectively, by analogy to b and l conventionally used for galactic coordinates. The zero point for supergalactic longitude is defined by the intersection of this plane with the galactic plane.

Definition

  • The north supergalactic pole (SGB=90°) lies at galactic coordinates (l=47.37°, b=+6.32°). In the equatorial coordinate system (epoch J2000), this is approximately (RA=18.9 h, Dec=+15.7°).
  • The zero point (SGB=0°, SGL=0°) lies at (l=137.37°, b=0°). In the equatorial coordinate system (J2000) this is approximately (2.82 h, +59.5°).

    See also

  • Coordinate system

    External references

  • precise definition by Lahav et al 2000, MNRAS, 312, 166


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