A Near-Infrared Extinction and Reddening Map Towards the Galactic Bulge Using UKIRT

Abstract

The Galactic bulge is one of the most information-dense regions to study resolved stellar populations, variables, and transients, such as microlensing events. Studies toward the Galactic bulge are complicated by the large and variable extinction along the line of sight. We measure the near-infrared AKS extinction and E(H-KS) reddening in this region using H- and K-band photometry obtained with the 2017 UKIRT microlensing survey. We fit the apparent magnitude and color distribution of bright giants in the bulge to recover the apparent magnitude and color of Red Clump stars, which are known to be standard candles and crayons. We present 2 × 2 resolution maps in UKIRT fields between -2.15 l 2.71 and -2.69 b 2.03 of the AKS extinction and the E(H-KS) reddening. We find large variations in the KS-band extinction and E(H-KS) reddening on all the scales we probe. We find that a constant, standard extinction law is a poor representation of the relationship between the extinction and reddening we measure in fields of different latitudes. These maps will be useful for understanding the near-infrared extinction law for sight lines close to the Galactic plane, as well as for final field selection for the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey.

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