We use Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data to investigate galaxy cluster
properties of systems first detected within DPOSS. With the high quality
photometry of SDSS we derived new photometric redshifts and estimated richness
and optical luminosity. For a subset of low redshift (z≤0.1) clusters, we
have used SDSS spectroscopic data to identify groups in redshift space in the
region of each cluster, complemented with massive systems from the literature
to assure the continuous mass sampling. A method to remove interlopers is
applied, and a virial analysis is performed resulting in estimates of velocity
dispersion, mass, and a physical radius for each low-z system. We discuss the
choice of maximum radius and luminosity range in the dynamical analysis,
showing that a spectroscopic survey must be complete to at least M∗+1 if one
wishes to obtain accurate and unbiased estimates of velocity dispersion and
mass. We have measured X-ray luminosity for all clusters using archival data
from RASS. For a smaller subset (twenty-one clusters) we selected temperature
measures from the literature and estimated mass from the M-TX relation,
finding that they show good agreement with the virial estimate. However, these
two mass estimates tend to disagree with the caustic results. We measured the
presence of substructure in all clusters of the sample and found that clusters
with substructure have virial masses higher than those derived from TX. This
trend is not seen when comparing the caustic and X-ray masses. That happens
because the caustic mass is estimated directly from the mass profile, so it is
less affected by substructure.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, 5 tables, Accepted to MNRA