The ACS LCID Project. I. Short-Period Variables in the Isolated Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies Cetus & Tucana
Edouard J. Bernard, Matteo Monelli, Carme Gallart, Igor Drozdovsky,, Peter B. Stetson, Antonio Aparicio, Santi Cassisi, Lucio Mayer, Andrew A., Cole, Sebastian L. Hidalgo, Evan D. Skillman, Eline Tolstoy

TL;DR
This study identifies and analyzes variable star populations, mainly RR Lyrae, in the isolated dwarf spheroidal galaxies Cetus and Tucana using Hubble Space Telescope data, providing insights into their distances and stellar properties.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of variable stars in Cetus and Tucana, including RR Lyrae and anomalous Cepheids, with new distance estimates and pulsation mode distributions.
Findings
Both galaxies have RR Lyrae populations placing them in the Oosterhoff Gap.
Distances to Cetus and Tucana are estimated at approximately 780 and 890 kpc.
High fraction of RRd variables observed in Tucana (~17%).
Abstract
(abridged) We present the first study of the variable star populations in the isolated dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSph) Cetus and Tucana. Based on Hubble Space Telescope images obtained with the Advanced Camera for Surveys in the F475W and F814W bands, we identified 180 and 371 variables in Cetus and Tucana, respectively. The vast majority are RR Lyrae stars. In Cetus we also found three anomalous Cepheids, four candidate binaries and one candidate long-period variable (LPV), while six anomalous Cepheids and seven LPV candidates were found in Tucana. Of the RR Lyrae stars, 147 were identified as fundamental mode (RRab) and only eight as first-overtone mode (RRc) in Cetus, with mean periods of 0.614 and 0.363 day, respectively. In Tucana we found 216 RRab and 82 RRc giving mean periods of 0.604 and 0.353 day. These values place both galaxies in the so-called Oosterhoff Gap, as is…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
