The Transparency of Galaxy Clusters

Abstract

If galaxy clusters contain intracluster dust, the spectra of galaxies lying behind clusters should show attenuation by dust absorption. We compare the optical (3500 - 7200 ) spectra of 60,267 luminous, early-type galaxies selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to search for the signatures of intracluster dust in z ~ 0.05 clusters. We select massive, quiescent (i.e., non-star-forming) galaxies using an EW(Halpha) <= 2 cut and consider galaxies in three bins of velocity dispersion, ranging from 150 to 300 km s-1. The uniformity of early-type galaxy spectra in the optical allows us to construct inverse-variance-weighted composite spectra with high signal-to-noise ratio (ranging from 102-103). We compare the composite spectra of galaxies that lie behind and adjacent to galaxy clusters and find no convincing evidence of dust attenuation on scales ~ 0.15-2 Mpc; we derive a generic limit of E(B-V) < 3 x 10-3 mag on scales ~ 1-2 Mpc at the 99% confidence level, using conservative jackknife error bars, corresponding to a dust mass <~ 108 M. On scales smaller than 1 Mpc this limit is slightly weaker, E(B-V) < 8 x 10-3 mag.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…