Using classical Cepheids to study the far side of the Milky Way disk: I. Spectroscopic classification and the metallicity gradient
J. H. Minniti, L. Sbordone, A. Rojas-Arriagada, M. Zoccali, R., Contreras Ramos, D. Minniti, M. Marconi, V. F. Braga, M. Catelan, S. Duffau,, W. Gieren, A. A. R. Valcarce

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic analysis of classical Cepheids to explore the far side of the Milky Way disk, revealing its properties and metallicity gradient, and confirming similarities with the near side of the galaxy.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of a sizable sample of Cepheids on the far side of the Galactic disk, enabling the study of its properties and metallicity gradient.
Findings
Confirmed that the far side of the disk has similar properties to the near side.
Measured the radial metallicity gradient with a slope of -0.062 dex/kpc.
Discovered 10 new Cepheids and 4 new T2Cs in the far side region.
Abstract
The structure, kinematics, and chemical composition of the far side of the Milky Way disk, beyond the bulge, are still to be revealed. Classical Cepheids (CCs) are young and luminous standard candles. We aim to use a well-characterized sample of these variable stars to study the present time properties of the far side of the Galactic disk. A sample of 45 Cepheid variable star candidates were selected from near infrared time series photometry obtained by the VVV survey. We characterized this sample using high quality near infrared spectra obtained with VLT/X-Shooter, deriving radial velocities and iron abundances for all the sample Cepheids. This allowed us to separate the CCs, which are metal rich and with kinematics consistent with the disk rotation, from type II Cepheids (T2Cs), which are more metal poor and with different kinematics. We estimated individual distances and extinctions…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical and nuclear sciences · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
