Cepheid Variables
Probably the most important kind of variable star is called a
Cepheid variable, so-named because
the first such star discovered was delta Cephei. As we shall
see, Cepheid variables are important not only because of the variablity itself, but because
the variability can be used to determine distances in a reliable way.
Characteristics of Cepheids
Cepheids are yellow supergiant stars with well-defined periods that commonly lie
in the range 1-100 days.
Because they are supergiants, they are luminous and can be seen in other galaxies.
The following figure shows the light curve for delta Cephei (and a period-luminosity
relation
that we will discuss further below).
Origin of the Variability
The variability of Cepheids is a direct consequence of their pulsation in size.
The following figure shows the
variation in brightness, temperature, spectral class, surface velocity, and radius for the
prototype
Cepheid variable, delta Cephei,
as a function of the fraction of the pulsation period, as does this
animation.
The fluctuating radial velocity of the star (determined by Doppler methods) indicates
that it is pulsing in size, causing the surface to alternately move toward us and away
from us. We see that the surface temperature, radius, spectral class, and magnitude are
all changing periodically as a result of the systematic pulsation. (These
pulsations involve the propagation of waves inside the star and
are more complex than a simple uniform expansion and contraction, but we won't go into
that level of detail.)
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Revised Distance Scales
When Cepheid variables were first used to establish distance scales in our galaxy and to nearby galaxies
early in this century, it was not yet realized that there are two kinds of Cepheid variables. Also, some
RR Lyrae
variables were mistakenly assumed to be Cepheid variables in some of that work. The net effect was
that earlier distance scales were later revised by about factors of 2 when these mistakes were corrected.
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Two Kinds of Cepheid Variables
There are two kinds of Cepheid variables:
Type I Cepheids,
which are
Pop I stars (delta Cephei is an example), and Type-II Cepheids, which
are Pop II stars. (Recall that Pop I is the younger star population found mostly
in the disk of the galaxy, while Pop II is the older population found largely in the
globular
clusters.)
Type I Cepheids are also called
classical Cepheids and type-II Cepheids are also called
W Virginis stars.
These two classes of Cepheids resemble each other in most
characteristics, except for subtle spectral effects and that they obey different
period-luminosity relations, as we discuss further below.