Cepheid Metallicity in the Leavitt Law (C- MetaLL) survey: VI: Radial abundance gradients of 29 chemical species in the Milky Way Disk
E. Trentin, G. Catanzaro, V. Ripepi, J. Alonso-Santiago, R. Molinaro,, J. Storm, G. De Somma, M. Marconi, A. Bhardwaj, M. Gatto, I. Musella, and V., Testa

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-resolution spectra of 180 Cepheids across the Milky Way to map metallicity gradients and improve understanding of their role in calibrating cosmic distance measurements.
Contribution
It provides a homogeneous analysis of 292 Cepheids' metallicities and radial abundance gradients, extending the parameter space to metal-poor regimes and covering a wide galactic radius.
Findings
Negative metallicity gradient of -0.071 dex/kpc for [Fe/H]
Homogeneous data set enables detailed gradient analysis
Farthest Cepheids trace Galactic spiral arms
Abstract
Classical Cepheids (DCEPs) are crucial for calibrating the extragalactic distance ladder, ultimately enabling the determination of the Hubble constant through the PL and PW relations they exhibit. Hence it's vital to understand how the PL and PW relations depend on metallicity. This is the purpose of the C-MetaLL survey within which this work is situated. DCEPs are also very important tracers of the young populations placed along the Galactic disc. We aim to enlarge the sample of DCEPs with accurate abundances from high-resolution spectroscopy. Our goal is to extend the range of measured metallicities towards the metal-poor regime to better cover the parameter space. We observed objects in a wide range of Galactocentric radii, allowing us to study in detail the abundance gradients present in the Galactic disc. We present the results of the analysis of 331 spectra obtained for 180…
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
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Chemical Thermodynamics and Molecular Structure · Astronomical and nuclear sciences
