On the distance of the globular cluster M4 (NGC 6121) using RR Lyrae stars: I. optical and near-infrared Period-Luminosity and Period-Wesenheit relations
V. F. Braga (1, 2), M. Dall'Ora (3), G. Bono (1, 2), P. B., Stetson (4), I. Ferraro (2), G. Iannicola (2), M. Marengo (5), J. Neeley (5),, S. E. Persson (6), R. Buonanno (1, 7), G. Coppola (3), W. Freedman (6), B., F. Madore (6), M. Marconi (3), N. Matsunaga (8), A. Monson (6)

TL;DR
This study refines the distance to globular cluster M4 using optical and near-infrared RR Lyrae star relations, achieving high precision and agreement with geometric measurements.
Contribution
It introduces new empirical and theoretical Period-Luminosity and Period-Wesenheit relations across optical and NIR wavelengths for RR Lyrae stars in M4.
Findings
Optical-NIR and NIR relations have smaller scatter than optical.
Distances agree within 1 sigma across different methods.
Distance precision better than 2-3%.
Abstract
We present new distance determinations to the nearby globular M4 (NGC~6121) based on accurate optical and Near Infrared (NIR) mean magnitudes for fundamental (FU) and first overtone (FO) RR Lyrae variables (RRLs), and new empirical optical and NIR Period-Luminosity (PL) and Period-Wesenheit (PW) relations. We have found that optical-NIR and NIR PL and PW relations are affected by smaller standard deviations than optical relations. The difference is the consequence of a steady decrease in the intrinsic spread of cluster RRL apparent magnitudes at fixed period as longer wavelengths are considered. The weighted mean visual apparent magnitude of 44 cluster RRLs is (standard error of the mean) 0.177 (weighted standard deviation) mag. Distances were estimated using RR Lyr itself to fix the zero-point of the empirical PL and PW relations. Using the entire…
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