Uncertainties in The Interstellar Extinction Curve and the Cepheid Distance to M101
Abstract
I revisit the Cepheid-distance determination to the nearby spiral galaxy M101 (Pinwheel Galaxy) of Shappee & Stanek (2011), in light of several recent investigations questioning the shape of the interstellar extinction curve at λ ≈ 8,000 (i.e. I-band). I find that the relatively steep extinction ratio AI/E(V-I)=1.1450 (Fitzpatrick & Massa 2007) is slightly favoured relative to AI/E(V-I)=1.2899 (Fitzpatrick 1999) and significantly favoured relative the historically canonical value of AI/E(V-I)=1.4695 (Cardelli et al. 1989). The steeper extinction curves, with lower values of AI/E(V-I), yield fits with reduced scatter, metallicity-dependences to the dereddened Cepheid luminosities that are closer to values inferred in the local group, and that are less sensitive to the choice of reddening cut imposed in the sample selection. The increase in distance modulus to M101 when using the preferred extinction curve is μ 0.06 mag, resulting in an estimate of the distance modulus to M101 relative to the LMC of μLMC ≈ 10.72 0.03 (stat). The best-fit metallicity-dependence is dMI/d[O/H] ≈ (-0.38 0.14 (stat)) mag dex-1.
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