I Zw 18 Revisited with HST ACS and Cepheids: New Distance and Age*

2007 
We present new V- and I-band HST ACS photometry of I Zw 18, the most metal-poor blue compact dwarf (BCD) galaxy in the nearby universe. It has been argued in the past that I Zw 18 is a very young system that started forming stars only 500 Myr ago, but other work has hinted that older (1 Gyr) red giant branch (RGB) stars may also exist. Our new data, once combined with archival HST ACS data, provide a deep and uncontaminated optical color-magnitude diagram (CMD) that now strongly indicates an RGB. The RGB tip (TRGB) magnitude yields a distance modulus (m - M)0 = 31.30 ± 0.17, i.e., D = 18.2 ± 1.5 Mpc. The time-series nature of our observations allows us to also detect and characterize for the first time three classical Cepheids in I Zw 18. The time-averaged Cepheid V and I magnitudes are compared to the VI reddening-free Wesenheit relation predicted from new nonlinear pulsation models specifically calculated at the metallicity of I Zw 18. For the one bona fide classical Cepheid with a period of 8.63 days this implies a distance modulus (m - M)0 = 31.42 ± 0.26. The other two Cepheids have unusually long periods (125.0 and 129.8 days) but are consistent with this distance. The coherent picture that emerges is that I Zw 18 is farther away than previously assumed and older than suggested by some previous works. The presence of an RGB population rules out the possibility that I Zw 18 is a truly primordial galaxy formed recently (z 0.1) in the local universe.
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