On the mass-to-light ratios of fossil groups. Are they simply dark clusters?
Robert N. Proctor, Claudia Mendes de Oliveira, Renato Dupke, Raimundo, Lopes de Oliveira, Eduardo S. Cypriano, Eric D. Miller, Eli Rykoff

TL;DR
This study investigates the mass-to-light ratios of fossil groups, revealing they are more like poor clusters with high masses and BCG luminosities but low richness, challenging existing formation models.
Contribution
It provides the deepest analysis to date of fossil groups, showing they have cluster-like masses and BCG luminosities but low richness, suggesting a need to revise formation theories.
Findings
Fossil groups have high masses similar to clusters.
They exhibit high mass-to-light ratios.
Richnesses are extremely low despite high BCG luminosities.
Abstract
Defined as X-ray bright galaxy groups with large differences between the luminosities of their brightest and second brightest galaxies, "fossil groups" are believed to be some of the oldest galaxy systems in the universe. They have therefore been the subject of much recent research. In this work we present a study of 10 fossil group candidates with an average of 33 spectroscopically confirmed members per group, making this the deepest study of its type to-date. We also use this data to perform an analysis of the luminosity function of our sample of fossil groups. We confirm the high masses previously reported for many of fossil systems, finding values more similar to those of clusters than of groups. We also confirm the high dynamical mass-to-light ratios reported in many previous studies. While our results are consistent with previous studies in many ways, our interpretation is…
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