Modern observations of Hubble's first-discovered Cepheid in M31
M. Templeton, A. Henden, W. Goff, S. Smith, R. Sabo, G. Walker, R., Buchheim, G. Belcheva, T. Crawford, M. Cook, S. Dvorak, B. Harris

TL;DR
This paper provides a modern ephemeris and light curve for Hubble's first-discovered Cepheid in M31, supporting ongoing studies of its period stability and historical data comparison.
Contribution
It presents the first concentrated modern observations of M31-V1, updating its ephemeris and encouraging continued monitoring for period change analysis.
Findings
Derived a new ephemeris for M31-V1
Confirmed period consistency with historic values
Highlighted the need for ongoing observations
Abstract
We present a modern ephemeris and modern light curve of the first-discovered Cepheid variable in M31, Edwin Hubble's M31-V1. Observers of the American Association of Variable Star Observers undertook these observations during the latter half of 2010. The observations were in support of an outreach program by the Space Telescope Science Institute's Hubble Heritage project, but the resulting data are the first concentrated observations of M31-V1 made in modern times. AAVSO observers obtained 214 V-band, Rc-band, and unfiltered observations from which a current ephemeris was derived. The ephemeris derived from these observations is JD(Max) = 2455430.5(+/-0.5) + 31.4 (+/-0.1) E. The period derived from the 2010 data are in agreement with the historic values of the period, but the single season of data precludes a more precise determination of the period or measurement of the period change…
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