Variable Stars and Their Light Curves Arne Henden Director, AAVSO [email protected].

47
Variable Stars and Their Light Curves Arne Henden Director, AAVSO [email protected]

Transcript of Variable Stars and Their Light Curves Arne Henden Director, AAVSO [email protected].

Page 1: Variable Stars and Their Light Curves Arne Henden Director, AAVSO arne@aavso.org.

Variable Stars and Their Light Curves

Arne Henden

Director, AAVSO

[email protected]

Page 2: Variable Stars and Their Light Curves Arne Henden Director, AAVSO arne@aavso.org.

Photometry Basics

• Brightness as a function of time• Possible color information if you use more

than one filter (visual is always one filter, no color vision at night). Wide-band photometry is “poor man’s spectroscopy”.

• Almost always “differential”; comparing brightness of target vs. constant stars

• If combining estimates from more than one person/system, need to use same comparison stars and/or possibly “transform” data to same system

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Light Curve Basics

• Morphology: shape and structure • General Catalog of Variable Stars (GCVS)

classifications almost always morphology-based

• Rule: plotting light curves is easy; understanding the underlying physics is hard

• Rule: light curves only tell part of the story; use ancillary information whenever possible

• Time-series light curves• Phased light curves

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W Virginis coverage from SRO - one season

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W Vir phased light curve, BVRI

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Dips, Bumps and Wiggles• General morphological classifications• Stars can exhibit one or more of these

features• Features can be transitory• No two stars are alike• Rule: to determine if a feature is periodic, you

need to see it replicated at least twice, and preferably 3-5 times

• Rule: use two or more comparison stars, as any dip/bump might be in the comp rather than the target

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Dips

• Momentary decrease in brightness of star

• Can be caused by extrinsic obscuration by another object (eclipsing binary, exoplanet transit)

• Can be intrinsic decrease (R CrB, VY Scl)

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More dips

• Rule: Never trust an individual measurement (lots of equipment/sky problems can make one point bright or faint)

• Rule: Never trust a dip that occurs at the beginning or end of a time series (airmass changes cause systematic changes; twilight does the same)

• Rule: Eclipsing systems often have periods twice what you think (equal-depth minima)

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Z UMi - a circumpolar RCB

Note near complete BVRI coverage (dropouts due to summer monsoon) of this circumpolar object at SRO. 15:02:01.3 +83:03:49 Nearly “grey”

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Eclipsing binaries

• Contact (K) - the two stars are in contact, usually no clean start/stop of eclipse

• Semidetached (SD) - the two stars are near one another, often ellipsoidal in shape, with perhaps Roche lobe overflow

• Detached (D) - no influence by one star on the other, usually flat between eclipses

• Period is helpful in determining category, but primary classifier is light curve shape

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Modelling binaries

• Binary Maker 3 http://www.binarymaker.com Windows only

• PHOEBE/Wilson-DeVinney, primarily Linux http://phoebe.fiz.uni-lj.si/

• Usually require standardized filter photometry• Multiple filters improve results as it gives

temperature as well as geometry• Gives orbit size, inclination, relative sizes of

two stars

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DU Leo 1.37d EA 13ks = 0.15d

These and similar plots are from VGUIDE

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Example of total eclipse in LD 282. Note flatness. USNO 1.0m data

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V477 Cyg 2.35d 14ks =0.16d

Rule: period often about 10x width of eclipse

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IM Aur

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IM Aur (EA, period=1.247296)

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LD355 (note temp of secondary star)

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Observations of HD126080 with 6cm telescope and CCDGomez-Forrellad & Garcia-Melendo 1997

3 year period; eclipse was a month longTerrell et al. 2003

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Beta Lyr (Terrell)

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BV 1005

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FT UMa EW 0.655d

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BV1004

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DSct + EA

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Transiting exoplanets

• Similar to detached light curves, with very small dip (planet is small compared to star)

• With high precision, eclipse has D-shape• Eclipse gives size of planet; radial velocity

wobble gives mass• Excellent probe of stellar surface (limb

darkening, star spots)

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TrES-1

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Bumps

• Momentary increase in brightness of star

• Almost always intrinsic (star gets brighter)

• Wide range of physics, from flare (M dwarf) to stellar disruption (SNe)

• Differentiate by luminosity, as outbursts look very similar

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V344 Lyr (Still et al. ApJ)

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SS Cyg, 1896-2004

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Z Cam

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Obtaining light curves of microlensing candidates

Planet Mass

~13 ME

Credit: J. Skowron

Note: amateurs discovered closest microlensed star (Casseopeia) November 2006; 8th magnitude at peak

Credit: NASA

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Recent Novae

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V838 Mon light curve

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Two type Ia light curves (Hicken 2009)SN2007af SN2006X

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SN 1987A

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Light curve for a bright GRB afterglow, observed by amateurs

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Wiggles

• Light curve that contains both bumps and dips• Irregular when no obvious period can be determined

(semiregular variables)• Periodic include most pulsating stars, such as RR

Lyr, Cepheid, Mira• Periodic wiggles give information about stellar

structure. Multiple periods probe the interior of the star. Can be radial or non-radial pulsation.

• Rule: don’t trust catalog periods• Rule: primary classification by period

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DX Cet 0.104d

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GG UMa 0.135d

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V703 Sco 0.115 0.150

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AQ Leo

RRd0.550 0.410

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W Vir phased light curve, BVRI

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SU Cyg

Classical Cepheid

Period 3.84 days

Note phase shift, amplitude and shape change with wavelength

(Madore & Freedman, 1991

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You can observe single pulsation cycles…

…or follow decades-long trends

V Hya

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Resources

• AAVSO Variable Star of the Season archive: http://www.aavso.org/vsots_archive

• GCVS web site: http://www.sai.msu.su/gcvs/gcvs/index.htm

• J.R. Percy, "Understanding Variable Stars”• D. Terrell, J.D. Mukherjee & R.E. Wilson,

"Binary Stars: A Pictorial Atlas”• C. Sterken & C. Jaschek, "Light Curves of

Variable Stars: A Pictorial Atlas”• J. Kallrath & E.F. Milone, "Eclipsing Binary

Stars: Modeling and Analysis"

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Resources

• Chandra Variable Guide Star Catalog: http://cxc.harvard.edu/vguide/index.php

• G. Foster, “Analyzing Light Curves”