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Survey Description

Left: Distribution of Virgo Cluster Catalog (VCC) galaxies (Binggeli et al. 1985) on the plane of the sky. The red symbols show the galaxies observed in the ACS Virgo Cluster Survey. See Paper I of the ACS Virgo Cluster Survey for more details (Côté et al. 2004). Top: The ACSVCS image of the M87 core.

The Virgo Cluster is the rich cluster nearest to the Milky Way, and the dominant mass concentration in the local universe. It also represents the nearest large collection of early-type (red sequence) galaxies within ~50 Mpc. At a distance of ≈16.5 Mpc, it has historically played a central role in furthering our understanding of galaxy evolution, supermassive black holes, the extragalactic distance scale, the intracluster medium, extragalactic star clusters, and countless other topics in modern astrophysics.

The Fornax Cluster is smaller and more compact than Virgo. At a slightly larger distance of ≈20.0 Mpc, it offers an unique opportunity to study the fossil record of galaxy formation in rather different environment than the Virgo Cluster.

Right: The Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) in the Clean Room at the Goddard Space Flight Center, prior to launch on March 1, 2002. The ACS Virgo Cluster Survey was one of three HST Large Programs approved in Cycle 11, the first observing in which the ACS was available. The ACS Fornax Cluster Survey was begun  two years later, in Cycle 13.

In the autumn of 2001, the ACSVCS team initiated a large program to use the just installed Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope to carry out a comprehensive imaging survey of 100 early-type galaxies in the Virgo Cluster (Cycle 11, program number 9401). Two years later, time was awarded to observe 43 galaxies in the Fornax Cluster (Cycle 13, 10217). Taken together, these programs are the largest high-resolution imaging surveys of nearby galaxies ever undertaken, with ~500 science images (in the F475W and F850LP bands) acquired for 143 galaxies spanning a range of ~700 in blue luminosity. A wealth of supporting observations using ground- and space-based telescopes (i.e., Keck, KPNO, CTIO, Magellan, VLT, Chandra, Spitzer, etc) have been accumulated in support of these HST images. This includes Virgo Redux, a major UV and IR follow-up HST study of the ACSVCS sample that was designed to explore the star formation and chemical enrichment histories of galactic nuclei. Results from Virgo Redux were recently published in a comprehensive paper, Spengler et al. (2017).

 

For more details on the many scientific issues addressed in these surveys, see the publications section of this website.

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