The distance to NGC1316 (Fornax A): yet another curious case
Michele Cantiello (1), Aniello Grado (2), John P. Blakeslee (3),, Gabriella Raimondo (1), Gianluca Di Rico (1), Luca Limatola (2), Enzo Brocato, (1, 4), Massimo Della Valle (2, 5), Roberto Gilmozzi (6) ((1) INAF, Osservatorio Astronomico di Teramo

TL;DR
This study measures the distance to NGC1316 using Surface Brightness Fluctuations across multiple wavelengths, compares it with other indicators, and discusses implications for the cosmological distance scale and stellar populations.
Contribution
First B-band SBF measurements of NGC1316 are presented, and the study compares SBF-based distances with other methods, highlighting calibration issues affecting the distance scale.
Findings
SBF distance modulus m-M=31.59 ±0.05(stat) ±0.14(sys)
Discrepancy of ~17% between SBF and SNeIa distances
Field stars are dominated by a solar metallicity, intermediate age component
Abstract
The distance of NGC1316, the brightest galaxy in Fornax, is an interesting test for the cosmological distance scale. First, because Fornax is the 2nd largest cluster of galaxies at <~25 Mpc after Virgo and, in contrast to Virgo, has a small line-of-sight depth; and second, because NGC1316 is the galaxy with the largest number of detected SNeIa, giving the opportunity to test the consistency of SNeIa distances internally and against other indicators. We measure SBF mags in NGC1316 from ground and space-based imaging data, providing a homogeneous set of measurements over a wide wavelength interval. The SBF, coupled with empirical and theoretical calibrations, are used to estimate the distance to the galaxy. We present the first B-band SBF measurements of NGC1316 and use them together with the optical and near-IR SBF data to analyze the properties of field stars. Our distance modulus…
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