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The Hubble Constant from Observations of the...
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The Hubble Constant from Observations of the Brightest Red Giant Stars in a Virgo-Cluster Galaxy

Abstract

The Virgo and Fornax clusters of galaxies play central roles in determining the Hubble constant H_0. A powerful and direct way of establishing distances for elliptical galaxies is to use the luminosities of the brightest red-giant stars (the TRGB luminosity, at M_I = -4.2). Here we report the direct observation of the TRGB stars in a dwarf elliptical galaxy in the Virgo cluster. We find its distance to be 15.7 +- 1.5 Megaparsecs, from which we estimate a Hubble constant of H_0 = 77 +- 8 km/s/Mpc. Under the assumption of a low-density Universe with the simplest cosmology, the age of the Universe is no more than 12-13 billion years.

Authors

Harris WE; Durrell PR; Pierce MJ; Secker J

Publication date

June 10, 1998

DOI

10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/9806153

Preprint server

arXiv
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