Description
Classical Cepheids are primary distance indicators and a crucial stepping stone to determining the present-day value of the Hubble constant Ho to the precision and accuracy required to constrain apparent deviations from the LCDM Concordance Cosmological Model. We have measured the iron and oxygen abundances of a statistically significant sample of 89 Cepheids in the LMC, one of the anchors of the local Distance Scale, quadrupling the prior sample and including 68 of the 70 Cepheids used to constrain Ho by the SH0ES program. The goal is to constrain the extent to which the Cepheid luminosity is influenced by their chemical composition, which is an important contributor to the uncertainty on the determination of the Hubble Constant itself and a critical factor in the internal consistency of the distance ladder. We have derived stellar parameters and chemical abundances from a self-consistent spectroscopic analysis based on Equivalent Width of absorption lines. The iron distribution of Cepheids in the LMC can be very accurately described by a single Gaussian with a mean [Fe/H]=-0.409+/-0.003dex and sigma=0.076+/-0.003dex. We estimate a systematic uncertainty on the absolute mean values of 0.1dex. The width of the distribution is fully compatible with the measurement error and supports the low dispersion of 0.069 mag seen in the NIR HST LMC period-luminosity relation. The uniformity of the abundance has the important consequence that the LMC Cepheids alone cannot provide any meaningful constraint on the dependence of the Cepheid Period-Luminosity relation on chemical composition at any wavelength. This revises a prior claim based on a small sample of 22 LMC Cepheids that there was little dependence (or uncertainty) between composition and NIR luminosity, a conclusion which would produce an apparent conflict between anchors of the distance ladder with different mean abundance. The chemical homogeneity of the LMC Cepheid population makes it an ideal environment to calibrate the metallicity dependence between the more metal poor SMC and metal rich Milky Way and NGC 4258.
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