Multiplicity of Galactic Cepheids from long-baseline interferometry V. High-accuracy orbital parallax and mass of SU Cygni
A. Gallenne, N. R. Evans, P. Kervella, J. D. Monnier, C. R Proffitt,, G. H. Schaefer, E. M. Winston, J. Kuraszkiewicz, A. M\'erand, G., Pietrzy\'nski, W. Gieren, B. Pilecki, S. Kraus, J-B Le Bouquin, N. Anugu, T., ten Brummelaar, S. Chhabra, I. Codron, C. L. Davies, J. Ennis

TL;DR
This study precisely measures the orbital parallax and mass of the Galactic Cepheid SU Cygni using interferometry and spectroscopy, providing critical data to test stellar models and period-luminosity relations.
Contribution
It presents the most accurate mass and distance measurements for a Galactic Cepheid, challenging existing stellar evolution models and calibrations of period-luminosity relations.
Findings
Measured Cepheid mass with 1.2% accuracy
Determined distance with 0.5% precision
Found discrepancies with stellar evolution predictions
Abstract
Cepheid masses are particularly necessary to help solving the mass discrepancy, while independent distance determinations provide crucial test of the period-luminosity relation and Gaia parallaxes. We used CHARA/MIRC to measure the astrometric positions of the high-contrast companion orbiting the Cepheid SU Cygni. We also present new radial velocity measurements from the HST. The combination of interferometric astrometry with optical and ultraviolet spectroscopy provides the full orbital elements of the system, in addition to component masses and the distance to the Cepheid system. We measured the mass of the Cepheid, , and its two companions, and . This is the most accurate existing measurement of the mass of a Galactic Cepheid (1.2%). Comparing with stellar evolution models, we show that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical and nuclear sciences
