We detect weak gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
at the location of the WISExSCOS (WxS) galaxies using the publicly available
Planck lensing convergence map. By stacking the lensing convergence map at the
position of 12.4 million galaxies in the redshift range 0.1≤z≤0.345,
we find the average mass of the galaxies to be M200crit = 6.25
± 0.6 ×1012M⊙. The null hypothesis of no-lensing is
rejected at a significance of 17σ. We split the galaxy sample into three
redshift slices each containing ∼4.1 million objects and obtain lensing
masses in each slice of 4.18 ± 0.8, 6.93 ± 0.9, and 18.84 ± 1.2
\times\ 10^{12}\ \mbox{M}_{\odot}. Our results suggest a redshift evolution
of the galaxy sample masses but this apparent increase might be due to the
preferential selection of intrinsically luminous sources at high redshifts. The
recovered mass of the stacked sample is reduced by 28% when we remove the
galaxies in the vicinity of galaxy clusters with mass M200crit = 2
\times 10^{14}\ \mbox{M}_{\odot}. We forecast that upcoming CMB surveys can
achieve 5% galaxy mass constraints over sets of 12.4 million galaxies with
M200crit = 1×1012M⊙ at z=1.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables: updates: correlations between z-bins
included: accepted for publication in PR