The panchromatic view of the Magellanic Clouds from Classical Cepheids. I. Distance, Reddening and Geometry of the Large Magellanic Cloud disk
L. Inno, G. Bono, N. Matsunaga, G. Fiorentino, M. Marconi, B. Lemasle,, R. da Silva, I. Soszy\'nski, A. Udalski, M. Romaniello, H.-W. Rix

TL;DR
This study uses multi-band observations of Classical Cepheids to precisely determine the Large Magellanic Cloud's disk geometry, reddening, and distance, revealing differences in spatial distributions among stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides the most accurate multi-band Cepheid dataset for the LMC and derives detailed geometric and reddening maps, highlighting population-dependent spatial distributions.
Findings
LMC disk inclination is 25.05 degrees.
Reddening map is ten times more accurate than previous.
LMC distance modulus is 18.48 mag.
Abstract
We present a detailed investigation of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) disk using classical Cepheids. Our analysis is based on optical (I,V; OGLE-IV), near-infrared (NIR: J,H,Ks) and mid-infrared (MIR: w1; WISE) mean magnitudes. By adopting new templates to estimate the NIR mean magnitudes from single-epoch measurements, we build the currently most accurate, largest and homogeneous multi-band dataset of LMC Cepheids. We determine Cepheid individual distances using optical and NIR Period-Wesenheit relations (PWRs), to measure the geometry of the LMC disk and its viewing angles. Cepheid distances based on optical PWRs are precise at 3%, but accurate to 7, while the ones based on NIR PWRs are more accurate (to 3%), but less precise (2%-15%), given the higher photometric error on the observed magnitudes. We found an inclination i=25.05 0.02 (stat.) 0.55 (syst.) deg, and a…
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