Calibration of the Mid-Infrared Tully-Fisher Relation
Jenny G. Sorce, Helene M. Courtois, R. Brent Tully, Mark Seibert,, Victoria Scowcroft, Wendy L. Freedman, Barry F. Madore, S. Eric Persson, Andy, Monson, Jane Rigby

TL;DR
This paper calibrates the mid-infrared Tully-Fisher relation using Spitzer data, achieving accurate galaxy distance measurements and a preliminary Hubble Constant estimate, which aids cosmological research.
Contribution
It introduces a color correction to improve the mid-infrared Tully-Fisher relation's accuracy, matching the precision of optical bands while leveraging the advantages of mid-infrared photometry.
Findings
Achieved ~20% distance accuracy per galaxy.
Derived a preliminary Hubble Constant of 74±5 km/s/Mpc.
Established a calibrated relation using 213 galaxies and 26 distance anchors.
Abstract
Distance measures on a coherent scale around the sky are required to address the outstanding cosmological problems of the Hubble Constant and of departures from the mean cosmic flow. The correlation between galaxy luminosities and rotation rates can be used to determine distances to many thousands of galaxies in a wide range of environments potentially out to 200 Mpc. Mid-infrared (3.6 microns) photometry with the Spitzer Space Telescope is particularly valuable as the source of the luminosities because it provides products of uniform quality across the sky. From a perch above the atmosphere, essentially the total magnitude of targets can be registered in exposures of a few minutes. Extinction is minimal and the flux is dominated by the light from old stars which is expected to correlate with the mass of the targets. In spite of the superior photometry, the correlation between…
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