4.7 Article

Halos of spiral galaxies. I. The tip of the red giant branch as a distance indicator

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 633, Issue 2, Pages 810-820

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/468177

Keywords

distance scale; galaxies : distances and redshifts; galaxies : individual (NGC 3031, NGC 253, NGC 4244, NGC 4945, NGC 4258); stars : luminosity function, mass function; stars : Population II

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We have imaged the halo populations of a sample of nearby spiral galaxies using the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 on board the Hubble Space Telescope with the aim of studying the stellar population properties and relating them to those of the host galaxies. In four galaxies, the red giant branch is sufficiently well populated to measure the magnitude of the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB), a well-known distance indicator. Using both the Sobel edge-detection technique and maximum likelihood analysis to measure the I-band magnitude of the TRGB, we determine distances to four nearby galaxies: NGC 253, NGC 4244, NGC 4945, and NGC 4258. For the first three galaxies, the TRGB distance is here determined more directly, and is likely to be more accurate, than previous distance estimates. In the case of NGC 4258, our TRGB distance is in good agreement with the geometrical maser distance, supporting the Large Magellanic Cloud distance modulus (m = M)(0) = 18.50 that is generally adopted in recent estimates of the Hubble constant.

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