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ABSTRACT The SH0ES collaboration Hubble constant determination is in a ∼5σ difference with the Planck value, known as the Hubble tension. The accuracy of the Hubble constant measured with extragalactic Cepheids depends on robust stellar-crowding background estimation. Riess et al. (R20) compared the light-curve amplitudes of extragalactic and MW Cepheids to constrain an unaccounted systematic blending bias, =-0. 029 0. 037\, mag, which cannot explain the required, =0. 24 0. 05\, mag, to resolve the Hubble tension. Further checks by Riess et al. demonstrate that a possible blending is not likely related to the size of the crowding correction. We repeat the R20 analysis, with the following main differences: (1) we limit the extragalactic and MW Cepheids comparison to periods P 50\, d, since the number of MW Cepheids with longer periods is minimal; (2) we use publicly available data to recalibrate amplitude ratios of MW Cepheids in standard passbands; (3) we remeasure the amplitudes of Cepheids in NGC 5584 and NGC 4258 in two Hubble Space Telescope filters (F555W and F350LP) to improve the empirical constraint on their amplitude ratio A555/A350. We show that the filter transformations introduce an 0. 04\, mag uncertainty in determining γ, not included by R20. While our final estimate, =0. 013 0. 057\, mag, is consistent with the value derived by R20 and is consistent with no bias, the error is somewhat larger, and the best-fitting value is shifted by 0. 04\, mag and closer to zero. Future observations, especially with JWST, would allow better calibration of γ.
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Amir Sharon
Doron Kushnir
Wenlong Yuan
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Johns Hopkins University
Weizmann Institute of Science
NSF’s NOIRLab
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Sharon et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e792b5b6db643587703935 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae451
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