The Parallax of Omega Centauri Measured from Gaia EDR3 and a Direct, Geometric Calibration of the Tip of the Red Giant Branch and the Hubble Constant
John Soltis, Stefano Casertano, Adam G. Riess

TL;DR
This paper measures the parallax of Omega Centauri using Gaia EDR3 data, calibrates the Tip of the Red Giant Branch luminosity, and derives a Hubble constant consistent with previous estimates.
Contribution
It provides the first high-precision parallax measurement of Omega Centauri and uses it to directly calibrate the TRGB luminosity for cosmological distance measurements.
Findings
Omega Centauri parallax: 0.191 mas with 2.2% uncertainty.
Calibrated TRGB absolute magnitude: -3.97 mag.
Derived Hubble constant: 72.1 km s$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-1}$.
Abstract
We use data from the ESA Gaia mission Early Data Release 3 (EDR3) to measure the trigonometric parallax of Cen, the first high precision parallax measurement for the most massive globular cluster in the Milky Way. We use a combination of positional and high quality proper motion data from EDR3 to identify over 100,000 cluster members, of which 67,000 are in the magnitude and color range where EDR3 parallaxes are best calibrated. We find the estimated parallax to be robust, demonstrating good control of systematics within the color-magnitude diagram of the cluster. We find a parallax for the cluster of (statistical) (systematic) mas (2.2\% total uncertainty) corresponding to a distance of kpc. The parallax of Cen provides a unique opportunity to directly and geometrically calibrate the luminosity of the Tip of the Red Giant…
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