Weak gravitational lensing provides a potentially powerful method for the
detection of clusters. In addition to cluster candidates, a large number of
objects with possibly no optical or X-ray component have been detected in
shear-selected samples. We develop an analytic model to investigate the claim
of Weinberg & Kamionkowski (2002) that unvirialised protoclusters account for a
significant number of these so-called "dark" lenses. In our model, a
protocluster consists of a small virialised region surrounded by in-falling
matter. We find that, in order for a protocluster to simultaneously escape
X-ray detection and create a detectable weak lensing signal, it must have a
small virial mass (~10^{13} \Msun) and large total mass (~ 10^{15} \Msun), with
a relatively flat density profile outside of the virial radius. Such objects
would be characterized by rising tangential shear profiles well beyond the
virial radius. We use a semi-analytic approach based on the excursion set
formalism to estimate the abundance of lensing protoclusters with a low
probability of X-ray detection. We find that they are extremely rare,
accounting for less than 0.4 per cent of the total lenses in a survey with
background galaxy density n = 30 arcmin^{-2} and an intrinsic ellipticity
dispersion of 0.3. We conclude that lensing protoclusters with undetectable
X-Ray luminosities are too rare to account for a significant number of dark
lenses.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, version accepted by MNRAS (minor changes in
response to referee