An Empirical Calibration of the Tip of the Red Giant Branch Distance Method in the Near Infrared. II. JWST NIRCam Wide Filters

Abstract

The tip of the red giant (TRGB) is a standardizable candle and is identifiable as the discontinuity at the bright extreme of the red giant branch (RGB) stars in color-magnitude diagram (CMD) space. The TRGB-based distance method has been calibrated and used to measured distances to galaxies out to D≤20 Mpc with the I-band equivalent Hubble Space Telescope (HST) F814W filter, and as an important rung in the distance ladder to measure the Hubble constant, H0. In the infrared (IR), the TRGB apparent magnitude ranges from 1-2 magnitudes brighter than in the optical, and now with the IR James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observatory the feasible distance range of the TRGB method can be extended to 50 Mpc. However, in the IR the TRGB luminosity depends to varying degrees on stellar metallicity and age. In this study we standardize the TRGB luminosity using stellar colors as a proxy for metallicity/age to derive color-based corrections for the JWST Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) short wavelength (SW) filters F090W, F115W, F150W and the long wavelength (LW) filters F277W, F356W, and F444W. We provide recommended filter combinations for distance measurements depending on the requisite precision. For science requiring high precision (≤1\% in distance) and robustness we recommend measuring the TRGB in F090W vs F090W-F150W or F115W vs. F115W-F277W with the caveat that even with JWST long integration times will be necessary at further distances. If lower precision (>1.5\% in distance) can be tolerated, or if shorter integration times are desirable, we recommend measuring the TRGB in either F115W or F150W paired with F356W. We do not recommend F444W for precision TRGB measurements due to its lower angular resolution.

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