522 research outputs found
Clustering of Local Group distances: publication bias or correlated measurements? V. Galactic rotation constants
As part of on an extensive data mining effort, we have compiled a database of
162 Galactic rotation speed measurements at (the solar Galactocentric
distance), . Published between 1927 and 2017 June, this represents
the most comprehensive set of values since the 1985 meta analysis
that led to the last revision of the International Astronomical Union's
recommended Galactic rotation constants. Although we do not find any compelling
evidence of the presence of `publication bias' in recent decades, we find clear
differences among the values and the ratios resulting
from the use of different tracer populations. Specifically, young tracers
(including OB and supergiant stars, masers, Cepheid variables, H{\sc ii}
regions, and young open clusters), as well as kinematic measurements of Sgr A*
near the Galactic Center, imply a significantly larger Galactic rotation speed
at the solar circle and a higher ratio (i.e., km s and km s kpc;
statistical uncertainties only) than any of the tracers dominating the Galaxy's
mass budget (i.e., field stars and the H{\sc i}/CO distributions). Using the
latter as most representative of the bulk of the Galaxy's matter distribution,
we arrive at an updated set of Galactic rotation constants, \Theta_0 = 225 \pm
3 \mbox{ (statistical)} \pm 10 \mbox{ (systematic) km s}^{-1}, R_0 = 8.3 \pm
0.2 \mbox{ (statistical)} \pm 0.4 \mbox{ (systematic) kpc}, and \Theta_0 /
R_0 = 27.12 \pm 0.39 \mbox{ (statistical)} \pm 1.78 \mbox{ (systematic) km
s}^{-1} \mbox{ kpc}^{-1}.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; ApJS, in pres
Clustering of Local Group distances: publication bias or correlated measurements? VII. A distance framework out to 100 Mpc
We consider the published distance moduli to the Fornax and Coma galaxy
clusters, with emphasis on the period since 1990. We have carefully homogenized
our catalogs of distance moduli onto the distance scale established in the
previous papers in this series. We assessed systematic differences associated
with the use of specific tracers, and discarded results based on application of
the Tully--Fisher relation and of globular cluster and planetary nebula
luminosity functions. We recommend `best' weighted relative distance moduli for
the Fornax and Coma clusters with respect to the Virgo cluster of mag and mag. The set of weighted mean distance moduli
(distances) we derived as most representative of the clusters' distances is,
\begin{eqnarray} (m-M)_0^{\rm Fornax} &=& 31.41 \pm 0.15 \mbox{ mag } (D =
19.1^{+1.4}_{-1.2} \mbox{ Mpc) and} \nonumber
&=& 31.21 \pm 0.28 \mbox{ mag } (D = 17.5^{+2.4}_{-2.2} \mbox{ Mpc)};
\nonumber \\ (m-M)_0^{\rm Coma} &=& 34.99 \pm 0.38 \mbox{ mag } (D =
99.5^{+19.0}_{-15.9} \mbox{ Mpc) and} \nonumber
&=& 34.78 \pm 0.27 \mbox{ mag } (D = 90.4^{+11.9}_{-10.6} \mbox{ Mpc)},
\nonumber \end{eqnarray} where the first value for each cluster is the result
of our analysis of the direct distance moduli, while the second modulus is
based on distance moduli relative to the Virgo cluster. The absolute and
relative distance moduli for both clusters are mutually consistent within the
uncertainties; the relative distance moduli yield shorter distances by
1. Lingering uncertainties in the underlying absolute distance
scale appear to have given rise to a systematic uncertainty on the order of
0.20 mag.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ
Clustering of Local Group distances: publication bias or correlated measurements? III. The Small Magellanic Cloud
Aiming at providing a firm mean distance estimate to the Small Magellanic
Cloud (SMC), and thus to place it within the internally consistent Local Group
distance framework we recently established, we compiled the current-largest
database of published distance estimates to the galaxy. Based on careful
statistical analysis, we derive mean distance estimates to the SMC using
eclipsing binary systems, variable stars, stellar population tracers, and star
cluster properties. Their weighted mean leads to a final recommendation for the
mean SMC distance of mag, where the
uncertainty represents the formal error. Systematic effects related to
lingering uncertainties in extinction corrections, our physical understanding
of the stellar tracers used, and the SMC's complex geometry---including its
significant line-of-sight depth, its irregular appearance which renders
definition of the galaxy's center uncertain, as well as its high inclination
and possibly warped disk---may contribute additional uncertainties possibly
exceeding 0.15--0.20 mag.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures (emulateapj format); AJ, in pres
Clustering of Local Group distances: publication bias or correlated measurements? II. M31 and beyond
The accuracy of extragalactic distance measurements ultimately depends on
robust, high-precision determinations of the distances to the galaxies in the
local volume. Following our detailed study addressing possible publication bias
in the published distance determinations to the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC),
here we extend our distance range of interest to include published distance
moduli to M31 and M33, as well as to a number of their well-known dwarf galaxy
companions. We aim at reaching consensus on the best, most homogeneous, and
internally most consistent set of Local Group distance moduli to adopt for
future, more general use based on the largest set of distance determinations to
individual Local Group galaxies available to date. Based on a careful,
statistically weighted combination of the main stellar population tracers
(Cepheids, RR Lyrae variables, and the magnitude of the tip of the red-giant
branch), we derive a recommended distance modulus to M31 of mag---adopting as our calibration an LMC distance modulus of
mag---and a fully internally consistent set of
benchmark distances to key galaxies in the local volume, enabling us to
establish a robust and unbiased, near-field extragalactic distance ladder.Comment: AJ, in press; 32 pages in AASTeX preprint format, 6 postscript
figures. For online database, see http://astro-expat.info/Data/pubbias.htm
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