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The Near-Infrared Tip of the Red Giant Branch. I. A Calibration in the Isolated Dwarf Galaxy IC 1613

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 Added by Taylor Hoyt
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Based on observations from the emph{FourStar} near-infrared camera on the 6.5m Baade-Magellan telescope at Las Campanas, Chile, we present calibrations of the $JHK$ luminosities of stars defining the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) in the halo of the Local Group dwarf galaxy IC 1613. We employ metallicity-independent (rectified) T-band magnitudes---constructed using $J,H$ and $K$-band magnitudes and both $(J-H)~ & ~(J-K)$ colors in order to flatten the upward-sloping red giant branch tips as otherwise seen in their apparent color-magnitude diagrams. We describe and quantify the advantages of working at these particular near-infrared wavelengths, which are applicable to both emph{HST} and emph{JWST}. We also note that these same wavelengths can be accessed from the ground for an eventual tie-in to emph{Gaia} for absolute astrometry and parallaxes to calibrate the intrinsic luminosity of the TRGB. Adopting the color terms derived from the IC 1613 data, as well as the zero-points from a companion study of the Large Magellanic Cloud whose distance is anchored to the geometric distances of detached eclipsing binaries, we find a true distance modulus of 24.32 $pm$ 0.02~ (statistical) $pm$ 0.06~mag (systematic) for IC 1613, which compares favorably with the recently published multi-wavelength, multi-method consensus modulus of 24.30 $pm$ 0.05~mag by Hatt et al. (2017).



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We present a new empirical (JHK) absolute calibration of the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We use published data from the extensive emph{Near-Infrared Synoptic Survey} containing 3.5 million stars, of which 65,000 are red giants that fall within one magnitude of the TRGB. Adopting the TRGB slopes from a companion study of the isolated dwarf galaxy IC,1613 as well as an LMC distance modulus of (mu_0 = )~18.49~mag from (geometric) detached eclipsing binaries, we derive absolute (JHK) zero-points for the near-infrared TRGB. For comparison with measurements in the bar alone, we apply the calibrated (JHK) TRGB to a 500 degtextsuperscript{2} area of the 2MASS survey. The TRGB reveals the 3-dimensional structure of the LMC with a tilt in the direction perpendicular to the major axis of the bar, in agreement with previous studies.
144 - Taylor J. Hoyt 2021
A zero point calibration of the Red Giant Branch Tip (TRGB) in the $I$-band is determined from OGLE photometry of the Magellanic Clouds (MCs). It is shown that TRGB measurements made in star-forming regions, with concomitantly high quantities of gas and dust, are less precise and biased to fainter magnitudes, as compared to the same measurements made in quiescent regions. Once these low accuracy fields are excluded from consideration, the TRGB can be used for the first time to constrain the three-dimensional plane geometry of the LMC. Composite CMDs are constructed for the SMC and LMC from only those fields with well-defined TRGB features, and the highest accuracy TRGB zero point calibration to date is presented. The $I$-band TRGB magnitude is measured to be flat over the color range $ 1.45 < (V-I)_0 < 1.95$ mag, with a modest slope introduced when including metal-rich (up to $(V-I)_0 = 2.2$ mag) Tip stars into the fit. Both the flat, blue zero point and the shallow slope calibration are consistent with the canonical value of $-4.05$ mag for the old, metal-poor TRGB, and would appear to resolve a recent debate in the literature over the methods absolute calibration.
Using high precision ground-based photometry for 46 low-reddening Galactic globular clusters, in conjunction with Gaia DR2 proper motions for member star selection, we have calibrated the zero point of the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) method at two optical ($VI$) and three near-infrared ($JHK$) wavelengths. In doing so, we utilized the sharply-defined zero-age horizontal branch (ZAHB) of these clusters to relatively calibrate our cluster sample into a composite color-magnitude diagram spanning a wide range of metallicities, before setting the absolute zero point of this composite using the geometric detached eclipsing binary distance to the cluster $omega$ Centauri. The $I-$band zero point we measure [$M_I = -4.056 pm 0.02 text{ (stat}) pm 0.10 text{ (sys)} $] agrees to within one sigma of the two previously published independent calibrations, using TRGB stars in the LMC [$M_I = $ -4.047 mag; Freedman et al. 2019, 2020] and in the maser galaxy NGC 4258 [$M_{F814W} = $ -4.051 mag; Jang et al. 2020]. We also find close agreement for our $J,H,K$ zero points to several literature studies.
PHANGS-HST is an ultraviolet-optical imaging survey of 38 spiral galaxies within ~20 Mpc. Combined with the PHANGS-ALMA, PHANGS-MUSE surveys and other multiwavelength data, the dataset will provide an unprecedented look into the connections between young stars, HII regions, and cold molecular gas in these nearby star-forming galaxies. Accurate distances are needed to transform measured observables into physical parameters (e.g., brightness to luminosity, angular to physical sizes of molecular clouds, star clusters and associations). PHANGS-HST has obtained parallel ACS imaging of the galaxy halos in the F606W and F814W bands. Where possible, we use these parallel fields to derive tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) distances to these galaxies. In this paper, we present TRGB distances for 11 galaxies from ~4 to ~15 Mpc, based on the first year of PHANGS-HST observations. Five of these represent the first published TRGB distance measurements (IC 5332, NGC 2835, NGC 4298, NGC 4321, and NGC 4328), and eight of which are the best available distances to these targets. We also provide a compilation of distances for the 118 galaxies in the full PHANGS sample, which have been adopted for the first PHANGS-ALMA public data release.
We present a calibration of the Tip of the Red Giant Branch (TRGB) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) on the HST/ACS F814W system. We use archival HST observations to derive blending corrections and photometric transformations for two ground-based wide-area imaging surveys of the Magellanic Clouds. We show that these surveys are biased bright by up to ~0.1 mag in the optical due to blending, and that the bias is a function of local stellar density. We correct the LMC TRGB magnitudes from Jang & Lee (2017) and use the geometric distance from Pietrzynski et al. (2019) to obtain an absolute TRGB magnitude of M_F814W=-3.97+/-0.046 mag. Applying this calibration to the TRGB magnitudes from Freedman et al. (2019) in SN Ia hosts yields a value for the Hubble constant of H_0=72.4+/-2.0 km/s/Mpc for their TRGB+SNe Ia distance ladder. The difference in the TRGB calibration and the value of H_0 derived here and by Freedman et al. (2019) primarily results from their overestimate of the LMC extinction, caused by inconsistencies in their different sources of TRGB photometry for the Magellanic Clouds. Using the same source of photometry (OGLE) for both Clouds and applying the aforementioned corrections yields a value for the LMC I-band TRGB extinction that is lower by 0.06 mag, consistent with independent OGLE reddening maps used by us and by Jang & Lee (2017) to calibrate TRGB and determine H_0.
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