A variable star is a star whose brightness as seen from Earth (its apparent magnitude) changes systematically with time. This variation may be caused by a change in emitted light or by something partly blocking the light, so variable stars are classified as either:[1]

  • Intrinsic variables, whose inherent luminosity changes; for example, because the star swells and shrinks.
  • Extrinsic variables, whose apparent changes in brightness are due to changes in the amount of their light that can reach Earth; for example, because the star has an orbiting companion that sometimes eclipses it.
Comparison of VLT-SPHERE images of Betelgeuse taken in January 2019 and December 2019, showing the changes in brightness and shape. Betelgeuse is an intrinsically variable star.

Depending on the type of star system, this variation can include cyclical, irregular, fluctuating, or transient behavior. Changes can occur on time scales that range from under an hour to multiple years. Many, possibly most, stars exhibit at least some oscillation in luminosity: the energy output of the Sun, for example, varies by about 0.1% over an 11-year solar cycle.[2] At the opposite extreme, a supernova event can briefly outshine an entire galaxy.[3] Of the 58,200 variable stars that have been catalogued as of 2023, the most common type are pulsating variables with just under 30,000, followed by eclipsing variables with over 10,000.[4]

Variable stars have been observed since the dawn of human history. The first documented variable was the eclipsing binary Algol. The periodic variable Omicron Ceti, later named Mira, was discovered in the 17th century, followed by Chi Cygni then R Hydrae. By 1786, ten had been documented. Variable star discovery increased rapidly with the advent of photographic plates. When Cepheid variables were shown to have a period-luminosity relationship in 1912, this allowed them to be used for distance measurement. As a result, it was demonstrated that spiral nebulae are galaxies outside the Milky Way. Variable stars now form several methods for the cosmic distance ladder that is used to determine the scale of the visible universe.[5] The periods of eclipsing binaries allowed for a more precise determination of the mass and radii of their component stars, which proved especially useful for modelling stellar evolution.[6]

Discovery

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An ancient Egyptian calendar of lucky and unlucky days composed some 3,200 years ago may be the oldest preserved historical document of the discovery of a variable star, the eclipsing binary Algol.[7][8][9] Aboriginal Australians are also known to have observed the variability of Betelgeuse and Antares, incorporating these brightness changes into narratives that are passed down through oral tradition.[10][11][12] Pre-telescope observations of novae and supernovae events were recorded by Babylonian, Chinese, and Arab astronomers, among others.[13][14]

Of the modern astronomers in the telescope era, the first periodic variable star was identified in 1638 when Johannes Holwarda noticed that Omicron Ceti (later named Mira) pulsated in a cycle taking 11 months; the star had previously been described as a nova by David Fabricius in 1596.[15] This discovery, combined with supernovae observed in 1572 and 1604, proved that the starry sky was not eternally invariable as Aristotle and other ancient philosophers had taught. In this way, the discovery of variable stars contributed to the astronomical revolution of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.[16]

The second variable star to be described was the eclipsing variable Algol, by Geminiano Montanari in 1669; John Goodricke gave the correct explanation of its variability in 1784.[17] Chi Cygni was identified in 1686 by G. Kirch, then R Hydrae in 1704 by G. D. Maraldi.[18] By 1786, ten variable stars were known. John Goodricke himself discovered Delta Cephei and Beta Lyrae.[19] Since 1850, the number of known variable stars has increased rapidly, especially when it became possible to identify variable stars by means of photography. In 1885, Harvard College Observatory began a program of repeatedly photographing the entire sky for the purpose of discovering variable stars.[20]

In 1912 H. S. Leavitt discovered a relationship between the brightness of Cepheid variables and their periodicity.[21] E. Hubble used this result in 1924 when he discovered a Cepheid variable in what was then termed the Andromeda nebula. The resulting distance estimate demonstrated that this nebula was an "island universe", located well outside the Milky Way galaxy. This ended the Great Debate about the nature of spiral nebulae.[22] In 1930, astrophysicist Cecilia Payne published the book The Stars of High Luminosity,[23] in which she made numerous observations of variable stars, paying particular attention to Cepheid variables.[24] Her analyses and observations of variable stars, carried out with her husband, Sergei Gaposchkin, laid the basis for all subsequent work on the subject.[25]

The latest edition of the General Catalogue of Variable Stars[26] (2008) lists more than 46,000 variable stars in the Milky Way, as well as 10,000 in other galaxies, and over 10,000 'suspected' variables. Amateur astronomers have long played a significant role in variable star observation, with perhaps the oldest such organization being the Variable Star Section of the British Astronomical Association,[27] founded in 1890.

Detecting variability

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The most common kinds of variability involve changes in brightness, but other types of variability also occur, in particular changes in the spectrum. By combining light curve data with observed spectral changes, astronomers are often able to explain why a particular star is variable.

Variable star observations

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A photogenic variable star, Eta Carinae, embedded in the Carina Nebula

Variable stars are generally analysed using photometry,[28] spectrophotometry, and spectroscopy. Measurements of their changes in brightness can be plotted to produce light curves. For regular variables, the period of variation and its amplitude can be very well established; for many variable stars, though, these quantities may vary slowly over time, or even from one period to the next. Peak brightnesses in the light curve are known as maxima, while troughs are known as minima.[29]

Amateur astronomers can do useful scientific study of variable stars by visually comparing the star with other stars within the same telescopic field of view of which the magnitudes are known and constant. By estimating the variable's magnitude and noting the time of observation a visual lightcurve can be constructed. Organizations like the American Association of Variable Star Observers and the British Astronomical Association collect such observations from participants around the world and share the data with the scientific community.[30]

From the light curve the following data are derived:[31][32]

  • are the brightness variations periodical, semiperiodical, irregular, or unique?
  • what is the period of the brightness fluctuations?
  • what is the shape of the light curve (symmetrical or not, angular or smoothly varying, does each cycle have only one or more than one minima, etcetera)?

From the spectrum the following data are derived:[32]

  • what kind of star is it: what is its temperature, its luminosity class (dwarf star, giant star, supergiant, etc.)?
  • is it a single star, or a binary? (the combined spectrum of a binary star may show elements from the spectra of each of the member stars)
  • does the spectrum change with time? (for example, the star may turn hotter and cooler periodically)
  • changes in brightness may depend strongly on the part of the spectrum that is observed (for example, large variations in visible light but hardly any changes in the infrared)
  • if the wavelengths of spectral lines are shifted this points to movements (for example, a periodical swelling and shrinking of the star, or its rotation, or an expanding gas shell) (Doppler effect)
  • strong magnetic fields on the star betray themselves in the spectrum[33]
  • abnormal emission or absorption lines may be indication of a hot stellar atmosphere, or gas clouds surrounding the star.

In very few cases it is possible to make pictures of a stellar disk.[34] These may show darker spots on its surface. One such technique is Doppler imaging, which can use the shift of spectral lines to measure velocity, then use it to determine the ___location of a spot across the surface of a rapidly rotating star.[35]

Interpretation of observations

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Combining light curves with spectral data often gives a clue as to the changes that occur in a variable star.[36] For example, evidence for a pulsating star is found in its shifting spectrum because its surface periodically moves toward and away from us, with the same frequency as its changing brightness.[37]

About two-thirds of all variable stars appear to be pulsating.[38] In the 1930s astronomer Arthur Stanley Eddington showed that the mathematical equations that describe the interior of a star may lead to instabilities that cause a star to pulsate.[39] This mechanism was known as the Eddington valve, but is now more commonly called the Kappa–mechanism.[40] The most common type of instability is related to oscillations in the degree of ionization in outer, convective layers of the star.[41] Most stars have two layers where hydrogen and helium ionization occurs, respectively. These are referred to as partial ionization zones. The ___location of these layers determine the pulsational properties of the star.[40]

When the star is in the swelling phase, the partial ionization zone expands, causing it to cool. Because of the decreasing temperature the degree of ionization also decreases. This makes the plasma more transparent, and thus makes it easier for the star to radiate its energy. This in turn makes the star start to contract. As the gas is thereby compressed, it is heated and the degree of ionization again increases. This makes the gas more opaque, and radiation temporarily becomes captured in the gas. This heats the gas further, leading it to expand once again. Thus a cycle of expansion and compression (swelling and shrinking) is maintained.[40]

The pulsation of cepheids is known to be driven by oscillations in the ionization of helium (from He++ to He+ and back to He++).[42]

Nomenclature

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In a given constellation, the first variable stars discovered were designated with letters R through Z, e.g. R Andromedae. This system of nomenclature was developed by Friedrich W. Argelander, who gave the first previously unnamed variable in a constellation the letter R,[43] the first letter not used by Bayer. Letters RR through RZ, SS through SZ, up to ZZ are used for the next discoveries, e.g. RR Lyrae. Later discoveries used letters AA through AZ, BB through BZ, and up to QQ through QZ (with J omitted to avoid confusion with I).[44] Once those 334 combinations are exhausted, variables are numbered in order of discovery, starting with the prefixed V335 onwards.[45]

Classification

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Variable stars may be either intrinsic or extrinsic.[46]

  • Intrinsic variable stars: stars where the variability is being caused by changes in the physical properties of the stars themselves. This category can be divided into four subgroups.
    • Pulsating variables, stars whose radius alternately expands and contracts as part of their natural evolutionary aging processes.
    • Eruptive variables, stars who experience eruptions on their surfaces like flares or mass ejections.
    • Cataclysmic or explosive variables, stars that undergo a cataclysmic change in their properties like novae and supernovae.
    • X-ray variables, close binary systems with a hot mass-accreting compact object.[47]
  • Extrinsic variable stars: stars where the variability is caused by external properties like rotation or eclipses. There are two main subgroups.
    • Eclipsing binaries, double stars or planetary systems where, as seen from Earth's vantage point the stars occasionally eclipse one another as they orbit, or the planet eclipses its star.
    • Rotating variables, stars whose variability is caused by phenomena related to their rotation. Examples are stars with extreme "sunspots" which affect the apparent brightness or stars that have fast rotation speeds causing them to become ellipsoidal in shape.

These subgroups themselves are further divided into specific types of variable stars that are usually named after their prototype. For example, dwarf novae are designated U Gem stars after the first recognized star in the class, U Geminorum.[48]

The population of stars in the Milky Way galaxy is divided into two groups based on their age, chemical abundances, and motion through the galaxy. Population I stars are limited to the flat plane of the galactic system, known as thin disk stars. These originate in open clusters and often display high abundances of elements produced by stellar fusion processes – their metallicity. The Population II stars are more often distributed in the thick disk, the galactic halo, globular clusters, and galactic bulge. These are much older stars that show lower abundances of elements more massive than helium. In many cases the classification system of variable stars and their behavior is determined by their population membership.[49]

Intrinsic variable stars

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Intrinsic variable types in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram

Examples of types within these divisions are given below.

Pulsating variable stars

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Pulsating stars swell and shrink, affecting their brightness and spectrum. Pulsations are generally split into: radial, where the entire star expands and shrinks as a whole; and non-radial, where one part of the star expands while another part shrinks.[50][51]

Depending on the type of pulsation and its ___location within the star, there is a natural or fundamental frequency which determines the period of the star. Stars may also pulsate in a harmonic or overtone which is a higher frequency, corresponding to a shorter period. Pulsating variable stars sometimes have a single well-defined period, but often they pulsate simultaneously with multiple frequencies and complex analysis is required to determine the separate interfering periods. In some cases, the pulsations do not have a defined frequency, causing a random variation, referred to as stochastic. The study of stellar interiors using their pulsations is known as asteroseismology.[52]

The expansion phase of a pulsation is caused by the blocking of the internal energy flow by material with a high opacity,[52] but this must occur at a particular depth of the star to create visible pulsations. If the expansion occurs below a convective zone then no variation will be visible at the surface. If the expansion occurs too close to the surface the restoring force will be too weak to create a pulsation.[53] The restoring force to create the contraction phase of a pulsation can be pressure if the pulsation occurs in a non-degenerate layer deep inside a star, and this is called an acoustic or pressure mode of pulsation, abbreviated to p-mode. In other cases, the restoring force is gravity and this is called a g-mode. Pulsating variable stars typically pulsate in only one of these modes.[52]

Cepheids and cepheid-like variables

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H–R diagram showing the ___location of the instability strip

The Hertzsprung–Russell diagram is a scatter plot of stars showing the relationship between the absolute magnitude and the spectral class (luminosity vs. effective temperature). Most ordinary stars like the Sun occupy a band called the main sequence that runs from lower right to upper left on this diagram. Several kinds of these pulsating stars occupy a box called the Cepheid instability strip that crosses the main sequence in the region of A- and F-class stars, then proceeds vertically and to the right on the H–R diagram, finally crossing the track for supergiants.[54] These stars swell and shrink very regularly, caused by the star's own mass resonance, generally by the fundamental frequency. The Eddington valve mechanism for pulsating variables is believed to account for cepheid-like pulsations.[55]

The pulsational instability of Cepheid variables correlates with variations in the spectral class, effective temperature, and surface radial velocity of the star.[55] Each of the subgroups on the instability strip has a fixed relationship between period and absolute magnitude, as well as a relation between period and mean density of the star. The period-luminosity relationship makes these high luminosity Cepheids very useful for determining distances to galaxies within the Local Group and beyond.[22]

The Cepheids are named only for Delta Cephei, while a completely separate class of variables is named after Beta Cephei.

Classical Cepheid variables
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Simulation of a Cepheid variable with the pulsation rate greatly sped up, showing the change in luminosity and temperature

Type I cepheids, also called Classical Cepheids or Delta Cephei variables, are evolved population I (young, massive, and luminous) yellow supergiants which undergo pulsations with very regular periods on the range of 1–100 days.[55] They are relatively rare stars with hydrogen-burning progenitors that had 4 to 20 solar masses and temperatures above a B5 class.[56][57] Their radial pulsations are driven by the high opacity of ionized helium and hydrogen in their outer layers.[57] Because of their high luminosity, Classical Cepheids can be viewed in nearby galaxies outside the Milky Way.[55] On September 10, 1784, Edward Pigott detected the variability of Eta Aquilae, the first known representative of the class of Cepheid variables. However, the namesake for classical Cepheids is the star Delta Cephei, discovered to be variable by John Goodricke a few months later.[58]

Type II Cepheids
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Type II Cepheids (historically termed W Virginis stars) have extremely regular light pulsations and a luminosity relation much like the δ Cephei variables, so initially they were confused with the latter category. Type II Cepheids are uncommon stars that belong to the older Population II category,[55] compared to the younger type I Cepheids. The Type II have somewhat lower metallicity, much lower mass of around 0.5–0.6 M,[59] somewhat lower luminosity, and a slightly offset period versus luminosity relationship, so it is always important to know which type of star is being observed. They can be identified based on the shape of their light curve. Type II Cepheids are further sub-divided based on their pulsation periods as BL Her stars for periods of 1 to 4 days, W Vir stars for 4 to 20 days, and RV Tau stars for longer periods of up to 100 days.[60] These three subtypes correspond to consecutive states of stellar evolution after the star has exhausted the helium at its core.[61][59]

RR Lyrae variables
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These relatively common variable stars are somewhat similar to Cepheids, but are not as luminous and have shorter periods. They are older than type I Cepheids, belonging to Population II, but of lower mass than type II Cepheids.[62] Due to their common occurrence in globular clusters, they are occasionally referred to as cluster-type Cepheids.[63] They also have a well established period-luminosity relationship in the infrared K-band, and so are also useful as distance indicators.[62] As standard candles, they can be detected out to 1 Mpc, which lies within the local group of galaxies.[64] These are low mass giants having an A- or F-type spectrum, and are currently on the horizontal branch. They are radially pulsating and vary by about 0.2–2 in visual magnitude (20% to over 500% change in luminosity) over a period of several hours to a day or more. The category is divided into Bailey subtypes 'a', 'b', and 'c', depending on the shape of the light curve.[62]

Delta Scuti variables
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Delta Scuti (δ Sct) variables are similar to Cepheids but much fainter and with much shorter periods. They were once known as Dwarf Cepheids.[65] Delta Scuti variables display both radial and non-radial pulsations modes. They often show many superimposed periods, which combine to form a complex light curve. Their spectral type is usually late A- and early F-type stars, and they lie on or near the main sequence on the H-R diagram. When metallicity is solar, they have masses ranging from about 1.6 times the Sun for slower periods up to 2.4 at higher pulsation rates. With rotation rates of 40 to 250 km/s, Delta Scuti stars show small amplitudes of 0.01–0.03 magnitude with multiple pulsation modes, including many non-radial. For slower rotation rates under 30 km/s, the amplitude is 0.20–0.30 magnitude or more, and they are often radial pulsators.[66] Stars with Delta Scuti-like variations and an amplitude greater than 0.3 magnitude are known as AI Vel-type variables, after their prototype, AI Velorum.[67]

SX Phoenicis variables
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These stars are metal-poor, population II analogues of δ Scuti variables and are mainly found in globular clusters. They exhibit fluctuations in their brightness in the order of 0.7 magnitude (about 100% change in luminosity) or so with short periods of 1 to 3 hours. They have masses in the range of 1.0–1.3 solar. Within a cluster, they are referred to as pulsating blue stragglers, presumably being formed from the merger of two ordinary stars in a close binary system. SX Phe variables are slow rotators and most pulsation modes are radial.[66][68]

Rapidly oscillating Ap variables
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The roAp variables are rapidly rotating, strongly magnetic, chemically peculiar stars of spectral type A or occasionally F0, known as Ap stars. Their pulsatation behavior is much like those of Delta Scuti or Gamma Doradus variables found on the main sequence. They have extremely rapid variations with periods of a few minutes and amplitudes of a few thousandths of a magnitude. Unlike Delta Scuti stars, roAp stars pulsate with either a single high frequency or with multiple high frequencies that are closely spaced. However, the isolated high frequencies of roAp stars have also been observed in stars that are not chemically peculiar, and some Delta Scuti stars show pulsation in the roAp range. Thus the distinction is unclear.[69]

Long period variables

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The long period variables are cool evolved stars that pulsate with periods in the range of weeks to several years. All giant stars cooler than spectral type K5 are variable because of radial pulsations.[70]

Mira variables
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Light curve of Mira variable χ Cygni

Mira variables are aging red giant stars nearing the end of their active life on asymptotic giant branch (AGB). They have radial pulsation periods that can range from under 100 to over 2,000 days, although most are in the 200 to 450 day range.[71] They fade and brighten over a range of 8 magnitudes, a thousand fold change in luminosity.[72] Mira itself, also known as Omicron Ceti (ο Cet), varies in brightness from almost 2nd magnitude to as faint as 10th magnitude with a period of roughly 332 days.[73] The very large visual amplitudes are mainly due to the shifting of energy output between visual and infra-red as the temperature of the star changes.[72] In a few cases, Mira variables show dramatic period changes over a period of decades, thought to be related to the thermal pulsing cycle of the most advanced AGB stars.[74]

Semiregular variables
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These are long-period variables with shorter periods and smaller amplitudes than Miras, and their light curves are less regular. Types SRa and SRb are red giants, with the latter type displaying a less regular periodicity. The visual amplitude is typically less than 2.5 magnitudes.[75] They are believed to be precursors of Mira variables, but are longer lived and thus more common. The types SRc and SRd consist mostly of red supergiants and yellow supergiants, respectively.[75]

Semiregular variables may show a definite period on occasion, but more often show less well-defined variations that can sometimes be resolved into multiple periods.[75][76] A well-known example of a semiregular variable is Betelgeuse, which varies in brightness by half a magnitude with overlapping periods of 1.10 and 5.75 years.[77] At least some of the semi-regular variables are very closely related to Mira variables, possibly the only difference being pulsating in a different harmonic.[78]

Slow irregular variables
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These are red giants or supergiants with little or no detectable periodicity. Some are poorly studied semiregular variables, often with multiple periods, but others may simply be chaotic.[79] These variables are classified as type Lb or Lc, depending on whether they are cool giants or cool supergiants, respectively.[70] A prominent example of a slow irregular variable is Antares, which is classified as an Lc type with a brightness that ranges from 0.88 to 1.16 in visual magnitude.[79]

Long secondary period variables
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Many variable red giants and supergiants show variations over several hundred to several thousand days. The brightness may change by several magnitudes although it is often much smaller, with the more rapid primary variations are superimposed. The reasons for this type of variation are not clearly understood, being variously ascribed to pulsations, binarity, and stellar rotation.[80][81][82]

Beta Cephei variables

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Beta Cephei (β Cep) variables (sometimes called Beta Canis Majoris variables, especially in Europe)[83] undergo short period pulsations in the order of 0.1–0.6 days with an amplitude of 0.01–0.3 magnitudes (1% to 30% change in luminosity). They are at their brightest during minimum contraction. Many stars of this kind exhibits multiple pulsation periods.[84]

Slowly pulsating B-type stars

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Slowly pulsating B (SPB) stars are hot main-sequence stars slightly less luminous than the Beta Cephei stars, with longer periods and larger amplitudes.[85] They have masses in the range of 2.5–7 M, and non-radial pulsation periods from 0.5 to 3 days. Many are rapid rotators, which can cause them to appear cooler and, in some cases, lie outside instability strip.[86]

Very rapidly pulsating hot (subdwarf B) stars

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The prototype of this rare class is V361 Hydrae, a 15th magnitude subdwarf B star. They pulsate with periods of a few minutes and may simultaneous pulsate with multiple periods. They have amplitudes of a few hundredths of a magnitude and are given the GCVS acronym RPHS. They are p-mode pulsators.[87]

PV Telescopii variables

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Stars in this rare class are chemically peculiar type B (Bp) supergiants with a period of 0.1–1 day and an amplitude of 0.1 magnitude on average. Their spectra are peculiar by having weak hydrogen but extra strong carbon and helium lines, making this a type of extreme helium star.[88] The prototype for this category of variable is PV Telescopii, which undergoes small but complex luminosity variations and radial velocity fluctuations.[89]

RV Tauri variables

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These are yellow supergiant stars (actually low mass post-AGB stars at the most luminous stage of their lives) which have alternating deep and shallow minima.[90] This double-peaked variation typically has periods of 30–150 days and amplitudes of up to 3 magnitudes.[91] Superimposed on this variation, there may be long-term variations over periods of several years.[90] Their spectra are of type F or G at maximum light and type K or M at minimum brightness.[92] They lie near the instability strip, forming a higher luminosity extension of the type II Cepheids, while being cooler than type I Cepheids.[93] Their pulsations are caused by the same basic mechanisms related to helium opacity, but they are at a very different stage of their lives.

Alpha Cygni variables

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Alpha Cygni (α Cyg) variables are nonradially pulsating supergiants of spectral classes B to A. Their periods range from several days to several weeks, and their amplitudes of variation are typically of the order of 0.1 magnitudes. The light changes, which often seem irregular, may be caused by the superposition of many oscillations with close periods.[94] The progenitors of these stars have at least 14 solar masses. At least for the brighter members, these variables appear to have returned to the blue supergiant region of the H–R diagram after losing considerable mass as red supergiants.[95] Deneb, in the constellation of Cygnus is the prototype of this class.[96]

Gamma Doradus variables

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Gamma Doradus (γ Dor) variables are non-radially pulsating main-sequence stars of spectral classes F to late A, with luminosity classes of IV-V or V. Their periods are 0.3 to 3 days and their amplitudes typically of the order of 0.1 magnitudes or less. This variable type occupies a narrow range near the low-luminosity part of the instability strip, which partially overlaps the range of Delta Scuti variables. The physical properties of Gamma Doradus variables are similar to long-period Delta Scuti variables. Their slow period and low amplitudes makes Gamma Doradus variables difficult to discover from the ground; most have been spotted by space missions.[97]

Solar-like oscillations

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The Sun oscillates with very low amplitude in a large number of modes having periods around 5 minutes. The study of these oscillations is known as helioseismology. Oscillations in the Sun are driven stochastically by convection in its outer layers. The term solar-like oscillations is used to describe oscillations in other stars that are excited in the same way and the study of these oscillations is one of the main areas of active research in the field of asteroseismology.[98][99] Stars with surface convection layers that can produce solar-like oscillations are generally cooler than the right edge of the instability strip, which includes the lower main sequence along with subgiants and red giants. However, solar-like oscillations can also be excited by stellar pulsations, such as by Cepheids.[100]

Fast yellow pulsating supergiants

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A fast yellow pulsating supergiant (FYPS) is a luminous yellow supergiant with pulsations shorter than a day. They are thought to have evolved beyond a red supergiant phase, but the mechanism for the pulsations is unknown. The class was named in 2020 through analysis of TESS observations.[101]

Pulsating white dwarfs

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These non-radially pulsating stars have short periods of hundreds to thousands of seconds with tiny fluctuations of 0.001 to 0.2 magnitudes. Known types of pulsating white dwarf (or pre-white dwarf) include the DAV, or ZZ Ceti, stars, with hydrogen-dominated atmospheres and the spectral type DA;[102] DBV, or V777 Her, stars, with helium-dominated atmospheres and the spectral type DB;[103] and GW Vir stars, with atmospheres dominated by helium, carbon, and oxygen. GW Vir stars may be subdivided into DOV and PNNV stars.[104][105]

BLAP variables

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A Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsator (BLAP) is a very rare class of radially-pulsating star characterized by changes of 0.2 to 0.4 magnitudes with typical periods of 7 to 75 minutes.[106][107] They are thought to be the small helium core of a red giant that has had the remainder of its atmosphere stripped away by a binary companion.[107] It has been hypothesized that they are the long-sought surviving companions of Type Ia supernovae.[108] Alternatively, they may form from the merger of two low-mass white dwarfs.[106] BLAP are effectively pre-white dwarf bodies with an effective temperature between 20,000 and 35,000 K.[107] Most of these objects are in the medium or late stage of helium fusion.[109]

Eruptive variable stars

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Eruptive variable stars show irregular or semi-regular brightness variations caused by material being lost from the star, or in some cases being accreted to it. Despite the name, these are not explosive events.

Protostars

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Protostars are young objects that have not yet completed the process of contraction from a gas nebula to a veritable star. Most protostars exhibit irregular brightness variations.

Herbig Ae/Be stars
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Herbig Ae/Be star V1025 Tauri

Variability of more massive (2–8 solar mass) Herbig Ae/Be stars is thought to be due to gas-dust clumps, orbiting in the circumstellar disks. They can also occur due to cold spots on the photosphere or pulsations when crossing the instability strip. The optical variations are typically up to a magnitude in amplitude and occur on time scales of days to weeks. A particularly extreme example is UX Orionis, which is the prototype of "UXORs"; these protostars vary by 2 to 3 magnitudes.[110]

Orion variables
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Orion variables are young, hot pre–main-sequence stars usually embedded in nebulosity. They have irregular periods with amplitudes of several magnitudes. A well-known subtype of Orion variables are the T Tauri variables. Variability of T Tauri stars is due to spots on the stellar surface and gas-dust clumps, orbiting in the circumstellar disks.

FU Orionis variables
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These stars reside in reflection nebulae and show gradual increases in their luminosity in the order of 6 magnitudes followed by a lengthy phase of constant brightness. They then dim by 2 magnitudes (six times dimmer) or so over a period of many years. V1057 Cygni for example dimmed by 2.5 magnitude (ten times dimmer) during an eleven-year period. FU Orionis variables are of spectral type A through G and are possibly an evolutionary phase in the life of T Tauri stars.

Giants and supergiants

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Large stars lose their matter relatively easily. For this reason variability due to eruptions and mass loss is fairly common among giants and supergiants.

Luminous blue variables
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Also known as the S Doradus variables, the most luminous stars known belong to this class. Examples include the hypergiants η Carinae and P Cygni. They have permanent high mass loss, but at intervals of years internal pulsations cause the star to exceed its Eddington limit and the mass loss increases hugely. Visual brightness increases although the overall luminosity is largely unchanged. Giant eruptions observed in a few LBVs do increase the luminosity, so much so that they have been tagged supernova impostors, and may be a different type of event.

Yellow hypergiants
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These massive evolved stars are unstable due to their high luminosity and position above the instability strip, and they exhibit slow but sometimes large photometric and spectroscopic changes due to high mass loss and occasional larger eruptions, combined with secular variation on an observable timescale. The best known example is Rho Cassiopeiae.

R Coronae Borealis variables
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While classed as eruptive variables, these stars do not undergo periodic increases in brightness. Instead they spend most of their time at maximum brightness, but at irregular intervals they suddenly fade by 1–9 magnitudes (2.5 to 4000 times dimmer) before recovering to their initial brightness over months to years. Most are classified as yellow supergiants by luminosity, although they are actually post-AGB stars, but there are both red and blue giant R CrB stars. R Coronae Borealis (R CrB) is the prototype star. DY Persei variables are a subclass of R CrB variables that have a periodic variability in addition to their eruptions.

Wolf–Rayet variables

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Classic population I Wolf–Rayet stars are massive hot stars that sometimes show variability, probably due to several different causes including binary interactions and rotating gas clumps around the star. They exhibit broad emission line spectra with helium, nitrogen, carbon and oxygen lines. Variations in some stars appear to be stochastic while others show multiple periods.

Gamma Cassiopeiae variables

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Gamma Cassiopeiae (γ Cas) variables are non-supergiant fast-rotating B class emission line-type stars that fluctuate irregularly by up to 1.5 magnitudes (4 fold change in luminosity) due to the ejection of matter at their equatorial regions caused by the rapid rotational velocity.

Flare stars

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In main-sequence stars major eruptive variability is exceptional. It is common only among the flare stars, also known as the UV Ceti variables, very faint main-sequence stars which undergo regular flares. They increase in brightness by up to two magnitudes (six times brighter) in just a few seconds, and then fade back to normal brightness in half an hour or less. Several nearby red dwarfs are flare stars, including Proxima Centauri and Wolf 359.

RS Canum Venaticorum variables

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These are close binary systems with highly active chromospheres, including huge sunspots and flares, believed to be enhanced by the close companion. Variability scales ranges from days, close to the orbital period and sometimes also with eclipses, to years as sunspot activity varies.

Cataclysmic or explosive variable stars

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Supernovae

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Supernovae are the most dramatic type of cataclysmic variable, being some of the most energetic events in the universe. A supernova can briefly emit as much energy as an entire galaxy, brightening by more than 20 magnitudes (over one hundred million times brighter).[3] The supernova explosion is caused by a white dwarf or a star core reaching a certain mass/density limit, the Chandrasekhar limit, causing the object to collapse in a fraction of a second. This collapse "bounces" and causes the star to explode and emit this enormous energy quantity. The outer layers of these stars are blown away at speeds of many thousands of kilometers per second. The expelled matter may form nebulae called supernova remnants. A well-known example of such a nebula is the Crab Nebula, left over from a supernova that was observed in China and elsewhere in 1054. The progenitor object may either disintegrate completely in the explosion, or, in the case of a massive star, the core can become a neutron star (generally a pulsar) or a black hole.

Supernovae can result from the death of an extremely massive star, many times heavier than the Sun. At the end of the life of this massive star, a non-fusible iron core is formed from fusion ashes. This iron core is pushed towards the Chandrasekhar limit till it surpasses it and therefore collapses. One of the most studied supernovae of this type is SN 1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud.

A supernova may also result from mass transfer onto a white dwarf from a star companion in a double star system. The Chandrasekhar limit is surpassed from the infalling matter. The absolute luminosity of this latter type is related to properties of its light curve, so that these supernovae can be used to establish the distance to other galaxies.

Luminous red nova

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Images showing the expansion of the light echo of V838 Monocerotis

Luminous red novae are stellar explosions caused by the merger of two stars. They are not related to classical novae. They have a characteristic red appearance and very slow decline following the initial outburst.

Novae

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Novae are also the result of dramatic explosions, but unlike supernovae do not result in the destruction of the progenitor star. Also unlike supernovae, novae ignite from the sudden onset of thermonuclear fusion, which under certain high pressure conditions (degenerate matter) accelerates explosively. They form in close binary systems, one component being a white dwarf accreting matter from the other ordinary star component, and may recur over periods of decades to centuries or millennia. Novae are categorised as fast, slow or very slow, depending on the behaviour of their light curve. Several naked eye novae have been recorded, Nova Cygni 1975 being the brightest in the recent history, reaching 2nd magnitude.

Dwarf novae

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Dwarf novae are double stars involving a white dwarf in which matter transfer between the component gives rise to regular outbursts. There are three types of dwarf nova:

  • U Geminorum stars, which have outbursts lasting roughly 5–20 days followed by quiet periods of typically a few hundred days. During an outburst they brighten typically by 2–6 magnitudes. These stars are also known as SS Cygni variables after the variable in Cygnus which produces among the brightest and most frequent displays of this variable type.
  • Z Camelopardalis stars, in which occasional plateaux of brightness called standstills are seen, part way between maximum and minimum brightness.
  • SU Ursae Majoris stars, which undergo both frequent small outbursts, and rarer but larger superoutbursts. These binary systems usually have orbital periods of under 2.5 hours.

DQ Herculis variables

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DQ Herculis systems are interacting binaries in which a low-mass star transfers mass to a highly magnetic white dwarf. The white dwarf spin period is significantly shorter than the binary orbital period and can sometimes be detected as a photometric periodicity. An accretion disk usually forms around the white dwarf, but its innermost regions are magnetically truncated by the white dwarf. Once captured by the white dwarf's magnetic field, the material from the inner disk travels along the magnetic field lines until it accretes. In extreme cases, the white dwarf's magnetism prevents the formation of an accretion disk.

AM Herculis variables

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In these cataclysmic variables, the white dwarf's magnetic field is so strong that it synchronizes the white dwarf's spin period with the binary orbital period. Instead of forming an accretion disk, the accretion flow is channeled along the white dwarf's magnetic field lines until it impacts the white dwarf near a magnetic pole. Cyclotron radiation beamed from the accretion region can cause orbital variations of several magnitudes.

Z Andromedae variables

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These symbiotic binary systems are composed of a red giant and a hot blue star enveloped in a cloud of gas and dust. They undergo nova-like outbursts with amplitudes of up to 4 magnitudes. The prototype for this class is Z Andromedae.

AM CVn variables

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AM CVn variables are symbiotic binaries where a white dwarf is accreting helium-rich material from either another white dwarf, a helium star, or an evolved main-sequence star. They undergo complex variations, or at times no variations, with ultrashort periods.

Extrinsic variable stars

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There are two main groups of extrinsic variables: rotating stars and eclipsing stars.

Rotating variable stars

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Stars with sizeable sunspots may show significant variations in brightness as they rotate, and brighter areas of the surface are brought into view. Bright spots also occur at the magnetic poles of magnetic stars. Stars with ellipsoidal shapes may also show changes in brightness as they present varying areas of their surfaces to the observer.[111]

Non-spherical stars

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Ellipsoidal variables
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These are very close binaries, the components of which are non-spherical due to their tidal interaction. As the stars rotate the area of their surface presented towards the observer changes and this in turn affects their brightness as seen from Earth.

Stellar spots

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The surface of the star is not uniformly bright, but has darker and brighter areas (like the sun's solar spots). The star's chromosphere too may vary in brightness. As the star rotates we observe brightness variations of a few tenths of magnitudes.

FK Comae Berenices variables
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Light curves for FK Comae Berenices. The main plot shows the short term variability plotted from TESS data;[112] the inset, adapted from Panov and Dimitrov (2007),[113] shows the long term variability.

These stars rotate extremely rapidly (~100 km/s at the equator); hence they are ellipsoidal in shape. They are (apparently) single giant stars with spectral types G and K and show strong chromospheric emission lines. Examples are FK Com, V1794 Cygni and UZ Librae. A possible explanation for the rapid rotation of FK Comae stars is that they are the result of the merger of a (contact) binary.[114]

BY Draconis variable stars
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BY Draconis stars are of spectral class K or M and vary by less than 0.5 magnitudes (70% change in luminosity).

Magnetic fields

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Alpha2 Canum Venaticorum variables
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Alpha2 Canum Venaticorum (α2 CVn) variables are main-sequence stars of spectral class B8–A7 that show fluctuations of 0.01 to 0.1 magnitudes (1% to 10%) due to changes in their magnetic fields.

SX Arietis variables
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Stars in this class exhibit brightness fluctuations of some 0.1 magnitude caused by changes in their magnetic fields due to high rotation speeds.

Optically variable pulsars
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Few pulsars have been detected in visible light. These neutron stars change in brightness as they rotate. Because of the rapid rotation, brightness variations are extremely fast, from milliseconds to a few seconds. The first and the best known example is the Crab Pulsar.

Eclipsing binaries

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How eclipsing binaries vary in brightness

Extrinsic variables have variations in their brightness, as seen by terrestrial observers, due to some external source. One of the most common reasons for this is the presence of a binary companion star, so that the two together form a binary star. When seen from certain angles, one star may eclipse the other, causing a reduction in brightness. One of the most famous eclipsing binaries is Algol, or Beta Persei (β Per).

Detached, double-lined eclipsing binaries are a useful tool for testing the validity of stellar evolution models. By examining the spectral types of the components and their combined light curve, the masses and radii of both stars can be precisely determined. Under the assumption that both stars formed at the same time, the model can then be used to extrapolate their history and see if it matches the current radii of the components.[6]

Algol variables

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Algol variables undergo eclipses with one or two minima separated by periods of nearly constant light. The prototype of this class is Algol in the constellation Perseus.

Double Periodic variables

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Double periodic variables exhibit cyclical mass exchange which causes the orbital period to vary predictably over a very long period. The best known example is V393 Scorpii.

Beta Lyrae variables

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Beta Lyrae (β Lyr) variables are extremely close binaries, named after the star Sheliak. The light curves of this class of eclipsing variables are constantly changing, making it almost impossible to determine the exact onset and end of each eclipse.

W Serpentis variables

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W Serpentis is the prototype of a class of semi-detached binaries including a giant or supergiant transferring material to a massive more compact star. They are characterised, and distinguished from the similar β Lyr systems, by strong UV emission from accretions hotspots on a disc of material.

W Ursae Majoris variables

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The stars in this group show periods of less than a day. The stars are so closely situated to each other that their surfaces are almost in contact with each other.

Planetary transits

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Stars with planets may also show brightness variations if their planets pass between Earth and the star. These variations are much smaller than those seen with stellar companions and are only detectable with extremely accurate observations. Examples include HD 209458 and GSC 02652-01324, and all of the planets and planet candidates detected by the Kepler Mission.

See also

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References

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