Phoenix Cluster

Phoenix Cluster
The cluster in a composite image of X-ray and visible light. Large holes in the blue emission are two vast outer cavities. Smaller inner cavities are at top right and bottom left of the central galaxy.
Observation data (Epoch J2000.0)
Constellation(s)Phoenix
Right ascension23h 44m 40.9s
Declination−42° 41 54
Brightest memberPhoenix A (mag 18.2)
Number of galaxies42 known
Redshift0.597320±0.000150 (center)
Distance2,640.6 ± 184.8 megaparsecs (8.61 ± 0.60 billion light-years)
(present comoving)
1,796.38 megaparsecs (5.86 billion light-years)
(light-travel)
Binding mass(1.26–2.5)×1015 M
Other designations
Phoenix Cluster, SPT-CL J 2344 -4243, SPT-CL J2344-4243

The Phoenix Cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243) is a massive, Abell class type I galaxy cluster located at its namesake, southern constellation of Phoenix. It was initially detected in 2010 during a 2,500 square degree survey of the southern sky using the Sunyaev–Zeldovich effect by the South Pole Telescope collaboration. It is one of the most massive galaxy clusters known, with the mass on the order of 2×1015 M, and is the most luminous X-ray cluster discovered, producing more X-rays than any other known massive cluster. It is located at a comoving distance of 8.61 billion light-years (2.64 gigaparsecs) from Earth. About 42 member galaxies were identified and currently listed in the SIMBAD Astronomical Database, though the real number may be as high as 1,000 galaxies.