Constraining Dust Extinction Properties via the VVV Survey
D. Majaess, D. Turner, I. Dekany, D. Minniti, W. Gieren

TL;DR
This study uses VVV survey infrared data to measure dust extinction ratios across the Galaxy, revealing variations with Galactic longitude and differences among stellar types, which impacts cosmic distance measurements.
Contribution
It provides new near-infrared extinction ratios from VVV survey data, highlighting their constancy with Galactic position and differences among stellar populations, challenging existing dust size variation theories.
Findings
Near-infrared ratios are constant with Galactic longitude.
Optical ratios vary significantly with Galactic longitude.
Different stellar types exhibit distinct extinction properties.
Abstract
Near-infrared color-excess and extinction ratios are essential for establishing the cosmic distance scale and probing the Galaxy, particularly when analyzing targets attenuated by significant dust. A robust determination of those ratios followed from leveraging new infrared observations from the VVV survey, wherein numerous bulge RR Lyrae and Type II Cepheids were discovered, in addition to data for classical Cepheids and O-stars occupying the broader Galaxy. The apparent optical color-excess ratios vary significantly with Galactic longitude (), whereas the near-infrared results are comparatively constant with and Galactocentric distance (). The results derived imply that classical Cepheids and O-stars display separate optical trends () with , which appear to…
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