Milky Way Cepheid Standards for Measuring Cosmic Distances and Application to Gaia DR2: Implications for the Hubble Constant
Adam G. Riess, Stefano Casertano, Wenlong Yuan, Lucas Macri, Beatrice, Bucciarelli, Mario G. Lattanzi, John W. MacKenty, J. Bradley Bowers, Weikang, Zheng, Alexei V. Filippenko, Caroline Huang, Richard I. Anderson

TL;DR
This study refines the cosmic distance scale using Gaia DR2 parallaxes and HST photometry of Milky Way Cepheids, revealing a significant tension in the Hubble constant measurements and implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It provides new calibrations of Cepheid distances incorporating Gaia DR2 data and assesses their impact on the Hubble constant discrepancy.
Findings
Gaia DR2 parallax zeropoint offset for Cepheids is -46 +/- 13 muas.
The calibrated distance scale is 1.006 +/- 0.033, slightly higher than previous estimates.
Including Gaia data increases the tension between local and cosmological H0 measurements to 3.8 sigma.
Abstract
We present HST photometry of a selected sample of 50 long-period, low-extinction Milky Way Cepheids measured on the same WFC3 F555W, F814W, and F160W-band photometric system as extragalactic Cepheids in SN Ia hosts. These bright Cepheids were observed with the WFC3 spatial scanning mode in the optical and near-infrared to mitigate saturation and reduce pixel-to-pixel calibration errors to reach a mean photometric error of 5 millimags per observation. We use the new Gaia DR2 parallaxes and HST photometry to simultaneously constrain the cosmic distance scale and to measure the DR2 parallax zeropoint offset appropriate for Cepheids. We find a value for the zeropoint offset of -46 +/- 13 muas or +/- 6 muas for a fixed distance scale, higher than found from quasars, as expected, for these brighter and redder sources. The precision of the distance scale from DR2 has been reduced by a factor…
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