2,208 research outputs found
Photometry of 40 LMC Cepheids
We present V and I_c CCD photometry for 40 LMC Cepheids at 1 to 3 epochs.
This represents a significant increase in the number of LMC Cepheids with
-band data, and, as we show, is a useful addition to the sample which can be
used to calibrate the period--luminosity relations in these important bands
Distances to Cepheid Open Clusters Via Optical and K-Band Imaging
We investigate the reddening and Main Sequence fitted distances to eleven
young, Galactic open clusters that contain Cepheids. Each cluster contains or
is associated with at least one Cepheid variable star. Reddening to the
clusters is estimated using the U-B:B-V colours of the OB stars and the
distance modulus to the cluster is estimated via B-V:V and V-K:V
colour-magnitude diagrams. By main-sequence fitting we proceed to calibrate the
Cepheid P-L relation and find M_V=-2.81xlogP-1.33 +/-0.32 and
M_K=-3.44xlogP-2.20 +/-0.29 and a distance modulus to the LMC of 18.55+/-0.32
in the V-band and 18.47+/-0.29 in the K-band giving an overall distance modulus
to the LMC of 18.51+/-0.3.
In the case of two important clusters we find that the U-B:B-V diagram in
these clusters is not well fitted by the standard Main Sequence line. In one
case, NGC7790, we find that the F stars show a UV excess which if caused by
metallicity would imply Fe/H ~ -1.5; this is anomalously low compared to what
is expected for young open clusters. In a second case, NGC6664, the U-B:B-V
diagram shows too red U-B colours for the F stars which in this case would
imply a higher than solar metallicity. If these effects are due to metallicity
then it would imply that the Cepheid PL(V) and PL(K) zeropoints depend on
metallicity according to delta(M)/delta(Fe/H) ~0.66 in the sense that lower
metallicity Cepheids are intrinsically fainter. Medium-high resolution
spectroscopy for the main-sequence F stars in these two clusters is needed to
determine if metallicity really is the cause or whether some other explanation
applies.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. Due to large size of paper, please see
http://star-www.dur.ac.uk:80/~fhoyle/papers.html for a version with the
figures correctly inserte
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