论文标题
金属性对Cepheid Leavitt Law的波长依赖性的校准得到了改善
An Improved Calibration of the Wavelength Dependence of Metallicity on the Cepheid Leavitt law
论文作者
论文摘要
Cepheid周期 - 轻度(PL)关系(或Leavitt Law)已成为最广泛使用的层外距离阶梯的第一个梯级,并且是确定哈勃常数局部值($ h_0 $)的核心。我们研究了金属对头晶亮度的影响,该术语显着改善了距离梯子的整体拟合,以更好地定义其波长依赖性。为此,我们比较了三个具有不同化学成分(以银河系和麦哲伦云)的头孢菌样品获得的PL关系,并专注于改进和最新数据的使用,同时覆盖了大约1个DEX的金属性范围。我们在15个过滤器中估算了15个过滤器的金属性效应(以下简称$γ$),包括五个Wesenheit指数,并且在所有经验研究和模型中,我们在所有过滤器中都获得了一个重要的金属性项,这是金属含石的固定物比金属poor较轻的,而不是金属稀有的。我们描述了各种系统效应在确定$γ$项中的贡献。我们没有发现$γ$在波长范围内发生变化的证据$ 0.5-4.5 \,\rmμm$ $,表明金属性对Cepheids的主要影响是其亮度而不是颜色。最后,我们确定了在过去的研究中对金属性项上的经验约束进行加强的因素,包括校正麦哲伦云的深度,更好地校准的头孢菌素光度法,改进的银河系灭绝估计以及修订和扩展的LMC中的金属度测量值。
The Cepheid period-luminosity (PL) relation (or Leavitt law) has served as the first rung of the most widely used extragalactic distance ladder and is central to the determination of the local value of the Hubble constant ($H_0$). We investigate the influence of metallicity on Cepheid brightness, a term that significantly improves the overall fit of the distance ladder, to better define its wavelength dependence. To this aim, we compare the PL relations obtained for three Cepheid samples having distinct chemical composition (in the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds) and focusing on the use of improved and recent data while covering a metallicity range of about 1 dex. We estimate the metallicity effect (hereafter $γ$) in 15 filters from mid-IR to optical wavelengths, including five Wesenheit indices, and we derive a significant metallicity term in all filters, in agreement with recent empirical studies and models, in the sense of metal-rich Cepheids being brighter than metal-poor ones. We describe the contribution of various systematic effects in the determination of the $γ$ term. We find no evidence of $γ$ changing over the wavelength range $0.5-4.5 \, \rm μm$, indicating that the main influence of metallicity on Cepheids is in their luminosity rather than color. Finally, we identify factors that sharpen the empirical constraints on the metallicity term over past studies, including corrections for the depth of the Magellanic Clouds, better-calibrated Cepheid photometry, improved Milky Way extinction estimates, and revised and expanded metallicity measurements in the LMC.