Testing General Relativity: new measurements of gravitational redshift in galaxy clusters
D. Rosselli, F. Marulli, A. Veropalumbo, A. Cimatti, L. Moscardini

TL;DR
This study measures gravitational redshift in galaxy clusters using SDSS data to test gravity theories, finding results consistent with general relativity and DGP, but marginally inconsistent with some $f(R)$ models.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for estimating cluster centers and applies a novel statistical approach to compare gravitational redshift measurements with multiple gravity theories.
Findings
Detected gravitational redshift at -11.4 km/s with 3.3 km/s uncertainty.
Results agree with general relativity and DGP models.
Marginal disagreement with certain $f(R)$ gravity predictions.
Abstract
The peculiar velocity distribution of cluster member galaxies provides a powerful tool to directly investigate the gravitational potentials within galaxy clusters and to test the gravity theory on megaparsec scales. We exploit spectroscopic galaxy and galaxy cluster samples extracted from the latest releases of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to derive new constraints on the gravity theory. We consider a spectroscopic sample of galaxy clusters, with a maximum redshift of . We analyse the velocity distribution of the cluster member galaxies to make new measurements of the gravitational redshift effect inside galaxy clusters. We accurately estimate the cluster centres, computing them as the average of angular positions and redshifts of the closest galaxies to the brightest cluster galaxies. We find that this centre definition provides a better estimation of the centre of…
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