I-Band Asymptotic Giant Branch (IAGB) Stars: I. Exploring a New Standard Candle for the Extragalactic Distance Scale
Barry F. Madore, Wendy L. Freedman, Taylor Hoyt, In Sung Jang, Abigail Lee, Kayla Owens

TL;DR
This paper identifies a new standard candle using I-band AGB stars in nearby galaxies, establishing their luminosity as a precise distance indicator for extragalactic measurements.
Contribution
It introduces and calibrates a new standard candle based on I-band AGB stars, with consistent luminosity across multiple galaxies, enhancing extragalactic distance measurements.
Findings
IAGB stars have a consistent I-band luminosity with a small dispersion.
Calibrated zero point for IAGB stars at M_I = -4.65 mag.
Potential for applying IAGB stars as standard candles up to 10 Mpc.
Abstract
In the I-band color-magnitude diagrams (CMD) of resolved nearby galaxies, the reddest asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars form a previously unremarked-upon, but nevertheless distinct and easily-identified population of high-luminosity stars. Hereafter we refer to this population as being comprised of I-Band AGB (IAGB) stars. Identifying these stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) and in NGC4258 (for all three of which there are published geometric distances) we find that the marginalized luminosity functions are each well approximated by single-peaked Gaussians, having one-sigma dispersions of +/- 0.22 mag, +/- 0.25 mag and +/- 0.24 mag, respectively. The zero points for the modal I-band absolute magnitudes of IAGB stars are found to be M_I = -4.49 +/- 0.003 mag (stat) in the LMC (4204 stars), M_I = -4.67 +/- 0.008 mag (stat), for the SMC sample…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
