High-resolution Spectroscopic Metallicities of Milky Way Cepheid Standards and their impact on the Leavitt Law and the Hubble constant
Anupam Bhardwaj, Adam G. Riess, Giovanni Catanzaro, Erasmo Trentin,, Vincenzo Ripepi, Marina Rejkuba, Marcella Marconi, Chow-Choong Ngeow, Lucas, M. Macri, Martino Romaniello, Roberto Molinaro, Harinder P. Singh, and Shashi, M. Kanbur

TL;DR
This study refines the metallicity measurements of Milky Way Cepheids, updating their period-luminosity relations and assessing their impact on the local Hubble constant determination, finding minimal systematic effects.
Contribution
It provides homogenized high-resolution spectroscopic metallicities for 75 Cepheids and updates their period-luminosity-metallicity relations using Gaia parallaxes.
Findings
Metallicity coefficients have large uncertainties due to limited data.
Including LMC Cepheids improves metallicity relation constraints.
Updated metallicities lead to a consistent H0 measurement of 72.9 km/s/Mpc.
Abstract
Milky Way Cepheid variables with accurate {\it Hubble Space Telescope} photometry have been established as standards for primary calibration of the cosmic distance ladder to achieve a percent-level determination of the Hubble constant (). These 75 Cepheid standards are the fundamental sample for investigation of possible residual systematics in the local determination due to metallicity effects on their period-luminosity relations. We obtained new high-resolution (), high signal-to-noise () multi-epoch spectra of 42 out of 75 Cepheid standards using ESPaDOnS instrument at the 3.6-m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Our spectroscopic metallicity measurements are in good agreement with the literature values with systematic differences up to dex due to different metallicity scales. We homogenized and updated the spectroscopic metallicities of all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
