The Cluster Mass Function from Early SDSS Data: Cosmological Implications
Abstract
The mass function of clusters of galaxies is determined from 400 deg2 of early commissioning imaging data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey; ~300 clusters in the redshift range z = 0.1 - 0.2 are used. Clusters are selected using two independent selection methods: a Matched Filter and a red-sequence color magnitude technique. The two methods yield consistent results. The cluster mass function is compared with large-scale cosmological simulations. We find a best-fit cluster normalization relation of sigma8*omegam0.6 = 0.33 +- 0.03 (for 0.1 ~< omegam ~< 0.4), or equivalently sigma8 = (0.16/omegam)0.6. The amplitude of this relation is significantly lower than the previous canonical value, implying that either omegam is lower than previously expected (omegam = 0.16 if sigma8 = 1) or sigma8 is lower than expected (sigma8 = 0.7 if omegam = 0.3). The best-fit mass function parameters are omegam = 0.19 (+0.08,-0.07) and sigma8 = 0.9 (+0.3,-0.2). High values of omegam (>= 0.4) and low sigma8 (=< 0.6) are excluded at >~ 2 sigma.
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