|
|
Paper: |
The Cepheid Distance Scale after Hipparcos |
Volume: |
167, Harmonizing Cosmic Distance Scales in a Post-Hipparcos Era |
Page: |
113 |
Authors: |
Pont, Frédéric |
Abstract: |
More than two hundred classical Cepheids were measured by the Hipparcos astrometric satellite, making possible a geometrical calibration of the Cepheid distance scale. However, the large average distance of even the nearest Cepheids measured by Hipparcos implies trigonometric parallaxes of at most a few mas. Determining unbiased distances and absolute magnitudes from such high relative error parallax data is not a trivial problem. In 1997, Feast & Catchpole announced that Hipparcos Cepheid parallaxes indicated a Period-Luminosity scale 0.2 mag brighter than previous calibrations, with important consequences on the whole cosmic distance scale. In the wake of this initial study, several authors have reconsidered the question, and favour fainter calibrations of Cepheid luminosities, compatible with pre-Hipparcos values. All authors used equivalent data sets, and the bulk of the difference in the results arises from the statistical treatment of the parallax data. We have attempted to repeat the analyses of all these studies and test them with Monte Carlo simulations and synthetic samples. We conclude that the initial Feast & Catchpole study is sound, and that the subsequent studies are subjected in several different ways to biases involved in the treatment of high relative error parallax data. We consider the source of these biases in some detail. We also propose a reappraisal of the error budget in the final Hipparcos Cepheid result, leading to a PL relation - adapted from Feast & Catchpole - of [MV=-2.81 (assumed) log P -1.43 ± 0.16 (stat) +0-0.03 (syst)] We compare this calibration to recent values from cluster Cepheids or the surface brightness method, and find that the overall agreement is good within the uncertainties. We also comment on the mismatch between the Cepheid parallax distance scale and kinematical determinations, for Cepheids as well as RR Lyrae. |
|
|
|
|