The virial radius of a gravitationally bound astrophysical system is the radius within which the virial theorem applies. It is defined as the radius at which the density is equal to the critical density of the universe at the redshift of the system, multiplied by an overdensity constant :
where
\Delta_c \approx 18\pi^2+82x-39x^2,
where x=\Omega_m(z)-1, \Omega_m(z)=\frac{\Omega_0(1+z)^3}{E(z)^2}, \Omega_0=\Omega_m(0)=\frac{8 \pi G \rho_0}{3 H_0^2}, and E(z)=\frac{H(z)}{H_0}.[{{Cite journal|last1=Bryan|first1=Greg L.|last2=Norman|first2=Michael L.|year=1998|title=Statistical Properties of X-ray Clusters: Analytic and Numerical Comparisons|journal=The Astrophysical Journal|volume=495|issue=80|pages=80|arxiv=astro-ph/9710107|doi=10.1086/305262|bibcode=1998ApJ...495...80B|s2cid=16118077}}][{{Cite book|title=Galaxy Formation and Evolution|url=https://archive.org/details/galaxyformatione00moho_818|url-access=limited|last1=Mo|first1=Houjun|last2=van den Bosch|first2=Frank|last3=White|first3=Simon|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2011|isbn=978-0-521-85793-2|location=United States of America|pages=[https://archive.org/details/galaxyformatione00moho_818/page/n257 236]}}] Since it depends on the density parameter of matter \Omega_m(z), its value depends on the cosmological model used. In an Einstein–de Sitter model it equals 18\pi^2\approx 178. This definition is not universal, however, as the exact value of \Delta_c depends on the cosmology. In an Einstein–de Sitter model, it is assumed that the density parameter is due to matter only, where \Omega_m=1. Compare this to the currently accepted cosmological model for the universe, ΛCDM model, where \Omega_m=0.3 and \Omega_{\Lambda}=0.7; in this case, \Delta_c \approx 100 (at a redshift of zero; with increased redshift the value approaches the Einstein-de Sitter value and then drops to a value of 56.65 for an empty de Sitter universe). Nevertheless, it is typically assumed that \Delta_c = 200 for the purpose of using a common definition, also giving the correct one-digit rounding for a long period 1090 > z > 0.87, and this is denoted as r_{200} for the virial radius and M_{200} for the virial mass. Using this convention, the mean density is given by
\rho(
Other conventions for the overdensity constant include \Delta_c = 500, or \Delta_c = 1000, depending on the type of analysis being done, in which case the virial radius and virial mass is signified by the relevant subscript.