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  2. Intracluster medium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intracluster_medium

    The stars and galaxies contribute only around 5% to the total mass. It is theorized that most of the mass in a galaxy cluster consists of dark matter and not baryonic matter. For the Virgo Cluster, the ICM contains roughly 3 × 10 14 M ☉ while the total mass of the cluster is estimated to be 1.2 × 10 15 M ☉. [1] [5]

  3. Dark matter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter

    Collage of six cluster collisions with dark matter maps. The clusters were observed in a study of how dark matter in clusters of galaxies behaves when the clusters collide. [151] Video about the potential gamma-ray detection of dark matter annihilation around supermassive black holes. (Duration 0:03:13, also see file description.)

  4. Bullet Cluster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet_Cluster

    The major components of the cluster pair—stars, gas and the putative dark matter—behave differently during collision, allowing them to be studied separately. The stars of the galaxies, observable in visible light, were not greatly affected by the collision, and most passed right through, gravitationally slowed but not otherwise altered.

  5. Dark globular cluster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_globular_cluster

    Dark globular cluster is a proposed type of globular star clusters that has an unusually high mass for the number of stars within it. Proposed in 2015 on the basis of observational data, dark globular clusters are believed to be populated by objects with significant dark matter components, such as central massive black holes .

  6. MACS J0025.4-1222 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MACS_J0025.4-1222

    MACS J0025.4-1222 is a galaxy cluster created by the collision of two galaxy clusters, and is part of the MAssive Cluster Survey (MACS). Like the earlier discovered Bullet Cluster, this cluster shows a clear separation between the centroid of the intergalactic gas (of majority of the normal, or baryonic, mass) and the colliding clusters.

  7. Abell 2744 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abell_2744

    Abell 2744, nicknamed Pandora's Cluster, is a giant galaxy cluster resulting from the simultaneous pile-up of at least four separate, smaller galaxy clusters that took place over a span of 350 million years, and is located approximately 4 billion light years from Earth. [1] The galaxies in the cluster make up less than five percent of its mass. [1]

  8. Abell 2218 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abell_2218

    Abell 2218 is a large cluster of galaxies over 2 billion light-years away in the constellation Draco. Acting as a powerful lens, it magnifies and distorts all galaxies lying behind the cluster core into long arcs. The lensed galaxies are all stretched along the cluster's center and some of them are multiply imaged.

  9. Coma Cluster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coma_Cluster

    In 1933 Fritz Zwicky showed that the galaxies of the Coma Cluster were moving too fast for the cluster to be bound together by the visible matter of its galaxies. Though the idea of dark matter would not be accepted for another fifty years, Zwicky wrote that the galaxies must be held together by "dunkle Materie" (dark matter). [19] [20]