Cross-correlation Weak Lensing of SDSS Galaxy Clusters III: Mass-to-light Ratios
Erin S. Sheldon, David E. Johnston, Morad Masjedi, Timothy A. McKay,, Michael R. Blanton, Ryan Scranton, Risa H. Wechsler, Ben P. Koester, Sarah M., Hansen, Joshua A. Frieman, and James Annis

TL;DR
This study measures the mass-to-light ratio around SDSS galaxy clusters using weak lensing, revealing how it varies with cluster size and estimating the universal ratio and matter density.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of the excess mass-to-light ratio around galaxy clusters across a wide mass range using cross-correlation weak lensing.
Findings
Mass-to-light ratio scales with cluster mass as a power law with index 0.33.
The asymptotic mass-to-light ratio is consistent with the universal value.
Estimated m of the universe from the ratio is approximately 0.02.
Abstract
We present measurements of the excess mass-to-light ratio measured aroundMaxBCG galaxy clusters observed in the SDSS. This red sequence cluster sample includes objects from small groups with masses ranging from ~5x10^{12} to ~10^{15} M_{sun}/h. Using cross-correlation weak lensing, we measure the excess mass density profile above the universal mean \Delta \rho(r) = \rho(r) - \bar{\rho} for clusters in bins of richness and optical luminosity. We also measure the excess luminosity density \Delta l(r) = l(r) - \bar{l} measured in the z=0.25 i-band. For both mass and light, we de-project the profiles to produce 3D mass and light profiles over scales from 25 kpc/ to 22 Mpc/h. From these profiles we calculate the cumulative excess mass M(r) and excess light L(r) as a function of separation from the BCG. On small scales, where \rho(r) >> \bar{\rho}, the integrated mass-to-light profile may be…
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