arXiv:astro-ph/9809132AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
The Distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud from the Eclipsing Binary HV2274
E. F. Guinan, E. L. Fitzpatrick, L. E. DeWarf, F. P. Maloney, P. A. Maurone, I. Ribas, A. Gimenez, J. D. Pritchard, D. H. Bradstreet
Published 1998-09-10, updated 1998-10-21Version 3
The distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is crucial for the calibration of the Cosmic Distance Scale. We derive a distance to the LMC based on an analysis of ground-based photometry and HST-based spectroscopy and spectrophotometry of the LMC eclipsing binary system HV2274. Analysis of the optical light curve and HST/GHRS radial velocity curve provides the masses and radii of the binary components. Analysis of the HST/FOS UV/optical spectrophotometry provides the temperatures of the component stars and the interstellar extinction of the system. When combined, these data yield a distance to the binary system. After correcting for the location of HV2274 with respect to the center of the LMC, we find d(LMC) = 45.7 +/- 1.6 kpc or DM(LMC) = 18.30 +/- 0.07 mag. This result, which is immune to the metallicity-induced zero point uncertainties that have plagued other techniques, lends strong support to the ``short'' LMC distance scale as derived from a number of independent methods.