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An absolute calibration of the near-infrared Period-Luminosity Relations of Type II Cepheids in the Milky Way and in the Large Magellanic Cloud

Authors :
Wielgórski, Piotr
Pietrzyński, Grzegorz
Pilecki, Bogumił
Gieren, Wolfgang
Zgirski, Bartłomiej
Górski, Marek
Hajdu, Gergely
Narloch, Weronika
Karczmarek, Paulina
Smolec, Radosław
Kervella, Pierre
Storm, Jesper
Gallenne, Alexandre
Breuval, Louise
Lewis, Megan
Kałuszyński, Mikołaj
Graczyk, Dariusz
Pych, Wojciech
Suchomska, Ksenia
Taormina, Mónica
Garcia, Gonzalo Rojas
Kotek, Aleksandra
Chini, Rolf
Nuñez, Francisco Pozo
Noroozi, Sadegh
Figaredo, Catalina Sobrino
Haas, Martin
Hodapp, Klaus
Mikołajczyk, Przemysław
Kotysz, Krzysztof
Moździerski, Dawid
Kołaczek-Szymański, Piotr
Wielgórski, Piotr
Pietrzyński, Grzegorz
Pilecki, Bogumił
Gieren, Wolfgang
Zgirski, Bartłomiej
Górski, Marek
Hajdu, Gergely
Narloch, Weronika
Karczmarek, Paulina
Smolec, Radosław
Kervella, Pierre
Storm, Jesper
Gallenne, Alexandre
Breuval, Louise
Lewis, Megan
Kałuszyński, Mikołaj
Graczyk, Dariusz
Pych, Wojciech
Suchomska, Ksenia
Taormina, Mónica
Garcia, Gonzalo Rojas
Kotek, Aleksandra
Chini, Rolf
Nuñez, Francisco Pozo
Noroozi, Sadegh
Figaredo, Catalina Sobrino
Haas, Martin
Hodapp, Klaus
Mikołajczyk, Przemysław
Kotysz, Krzysztof
Moździerski, Dawid
Kołaczek-Szymański, Piotr
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We present time-series photometry of 21 nearby Type II Cepheids in the near-infrared J, H and Ks passbands. We use this photometry, together with the Third Gaia Early Data Release parallaxes, to determine for the first time period-luminosity relations (PLRs) for Type II Cepheids from field representatives of these old pulsating stars in the near-infrared regime. We found PLRs to be very narrow for BL Herculis stars, which makes them candidates for precision distance indicators. We then use archival photometry and the most accurate distance obtained from eclipsing binaries to recalibrate PLRs for Type II Cepheids in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Slopes of our PLRs in the Milky Way and in the LMC differ by slightly more than 2{\sigma} and are in a good agreement with previous studies of the LMC, Galactic Bulge and Galactic Globular Clusters Type II Cepheids samples. We use PLRs of Milky Way Type II Cepheids to measure the distance to the LMC and we obtain a distance modulus of 18.540$\pm$0.026(stat.)$\pm$0.034(syst.)mag in the WJKs Wesenheit index. We also investigate the metallicity effect within our Milky Way sample and we find rather significant value of about -0.2mag/dex in each band meaning that more metal-rich Type II Cepheids are intrinsically brighter than their more metal-poor counterparts, in agreement with the value obtained from Type II Cepheids in Galactic Globular Clusters. The main source of systematic error on our Milky Way PLRs calibration and the LMC distance is the current uncertainty of the Gaia parallax zero point.<br />Comment: Accepted for ApJ

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363557746
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-4357.ac470c