In most direct estimates of the mass density (visible or dark) of the
Universe, a central input parameter is the luminosity density of the Universe.
Here we consider the measurement of this luminosity density from red-shift
surveys, as a function of the yet undetermined characteristic scale R_H at
which the spatial distribution of visible matter tends to a well defined
homogeneity. Making the canonical assumption that the cluster mass to
luminosity ratio M/L is the universal one, we can estimate the total mass
density as a function \Omega_m(R_H,M/L). Taking the highest estimated cluster
value M/L ~300h and a conservative lower limit R_H > 20 Mpc/h, we obtain the
upper bound \Omega_m < 0.1 . We note that for values of the homogeneity scale
R_H in the range R_H ~ (90 +/- 45) hMpc, the value of \Omega_m may be
compatible with the nucleosynthesis inferred density in baryons.Comment: 16 pages, latex, no figures. To be published in Astrophysical Journal
Letter