Cepheid Variables in the Andromeda Galaxy from Simon Fraser University's Trottier Observatory

This is a report on observations of 17 Cepheid variable stars in the Andromeda Galaxy, from Simon Fraser University's Trottier Observatory. The observatory is a teaching and public outreach facility with a 0.7-m aperture telescope under suburban skies. The observations were done as a group proj...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 2020-04, Vol.114 (2), p.56
Hauptverfasser: Trottier, Howord, Abraham, Rohan, Aburegebo, Zina, Cheung, Tereso, Cimone, Matthew, Dally, Kyle, Dobre, David, Grover, Rohit, Kollesøe, Sarah Sovit, Kelly, Katherine, Lee, David, Mazurenko, Oleg, Morley, Christina, Robus, Anjo, Watterson, Ryne, Wright, Aidan, Arthurs, Ken, Conrad, Robert, Krysa, Andrew, Miller, J Karl, Sebulsky, Greg, Siniak, Paul
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container_title Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada
container_volume 114
creator Trottier, Howord
Abraham, Rohan
Aburegebo, Zina
Cheung, Tereso
Cimone, Matthew
Dally, Kyle
Dobre, David
Grover, Rohit
Kollesøe, Sarah Sovit
Kelly, Katherine
Lee, David
Mazurenko, Oleg
Morley, Christina
Robus, Anjo
Watterson, Ryne
Wright, Aidan
Arthurs, Ken
Conrad, Robert
Krysa, Andrew
Miller, J Karl
Sebulsky, Greg
Siniak, Paul
description This is a report on observations of 17 Cepheid variable stars in the Andromeda Galaxy, from Simon Fraser University's Trottier Observatory. The observatory is a teaching and public outreach facility with a 0.7-m aperture telescope under suburban skies. The observations were done as a group project by a team that included students, staff, and faculty at the university, and members of the Vancouver Centre of The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. The Cepheid periods range from about 7 to 44 days, and observations were made on 26 nights over the course of two years. Images were taken through a luminance filter, and the instrumental magnitudes were converted to the Johnson-Cousins F-band using a calibration procedure whose precision is thoroughly characterized. The mean apparent magnitudes range from about 19.3 to 20.7, and they exhibit a correlation with the period that clearly reproduces the famous period-luminosity relation discovered by Henrietta Leavitt. We estimated the distance modulus μ (difference between apparent and absolute magnitudes) using a well-established calibration of the Leavitt relation, along with a correction for interstellar extinction from a professional study of this region of M31. We obtained μ = 24.37 ± 0.21, which is in excellent agreement with the known value, and corresponds to a distance of 2.44 ± 0.25 million light-years.
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We estimated the distance modulus μ (difference between apparent and absolute magnitudes) using a well-established calibration of the Leavitt relation, along with a correction for interstellar extinction from a professional study of this region of M31. We obtained μ = 24.37 ± 0.21, which is in excellent agreement with the known value, and corresponds to a distance of 2.44 ± 0.25 million light-years.</abstract><cop>Toronto</cop><pub>Royal Astronomical Society of Canada</pub></addata></record>
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subjects Andromeda Galaxy
Apertures
Astronomical research
Calibration
Celestial bodies
Cepheid variables
Colleges & universities
Interstellar extinction
Luminosity
Observatories
Space exploration
Stars & galaxies
Variable stars
title Cepheid Variables in the Andromeda Galaxy from Simon Fraser University's Trottier Observatory
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