1202.0581 (John Blakeslee)
John Blakeslee
The surface brightness fluctuations (SBF) method measures the variance in a
galaxy's light distribution arising from fluctuations in the numbers and
luminosities of individual stars per resolution element. Once calibrated for
stellar population effects, SBF measurements with HST provide distances to
early-type galaxies with unrivaled precision. Optical SBF data from HST for the
Virgo and Fornax clusters give the relative distances of these nearby fiducial
clusters with 2% precision and constrain their internal structures.
Observations in hand will allow us to tie the Coma cluster, the standard of
comparison for distant cluster studies, into the same precise relative distance
scale. The SBF method can be calibrated in an absolute sense either empirically
from Cepheids or theoretically from stellar population models. The agreement
between the model and empirical zero points has improved dramatically,
providing an independent confirmation of the Cepheid distance scale. SBF is
still brighter in the near-IR, and an ongoing program to calibrate the method
for the F110W and F160W passbands of the WFC3 IR channel will enable accurate
distance derivation whenever a large early-type galaxy or bulge is observed in
these passbands at distances reaching well out into the Hubble flow.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1202.0581
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