Variable Star Of The Season, Autumn 2006
The Remarkable Transformation of V725 Sgr
Introduction
Things change very slowly in the universe, and it is tempting to think
that they don't change at all. And that applies to variable star types.
A Cepheid is a Cepheid. A red semi-regular variable is a red
semi-regular variable. We know that our sun was once a T Tauri
variable, and that it will one day be a Mira variable. But that
transformation takes billions of years.
Admittedly, variable star astronomers can use the so-called (O-C) method
to measure the slow changes in the pulsation period that are caused by
the slow evolutionary expansion or contraction of a star; this is the
only way of observing the normal phases of evolution of stars. It has
been applied, with great success, to Cepheids such as Polaris (Turner et
al. 2005) and others (Turner et al. 2006). AAVSO observers, through
their systematic long-term monitoring of pulsating and eclipsing
variables, make important contributions to this process. But the period
change is minuscule: it typically amounts to a few seconds per century
change in a period which is several days or more.
It was therefore a wonderful surprise to variable star astronomers when
V725 Sgr was caught undergoing a remarkable transformation. It changed
from a Population II Cepheid to a semi-regular pulsating red giant in
less than a century! Henrietta Swope (1937) was the one responsible for
identifying, analyzing, and reporting on the star's remarkable behavior.
Who Was Henrietta Swope?
Henrietta Hill Swope (1902-1982) received her AB (1925) in mathematics
from Barnard College, and her AM (1928) from Radcliffe College, the
women's college associated with Harvard. At that time, women were not
permitted to study at Harvard itself. Her "conversion" to astronomy was
instigated by Margaret Harwood, Director of the Maria Mitchell
Observatory on Nantucket, where Swope's family had a summer cottage.
She was a research assistant at Harvard College Observatory (HCO) from
1928 to 1942. In earlier years, former HCO director E.C. Pickering had
established a "tradition" of hiring women as research assistants.
"Pickering's women" received lower salaries than men would have done, as
was the policy at the time, so his budget went further. These women
made important contributions to astronomy, and some of them are still
remembered in textbooks for their work. Henrietta was the granddaughter
of a president of Harvard, the daughter of a president of General
Electric, and the niece of a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, so we
assume that she was not unduly exploited.
During WWII, she worked at the MIT Radiation Lab, and then as a
mathematician in the US Department of the Navy. She taught astronomy at
Barnard College from 1947 to 1952, and then served as a research fellow
at the Mt. Wilson and Palomar Observatories. She was especially known
for her work in collaboration with Walter Baade. Despite her
distinguished work, there is little information available about her on
the Internet. The portrait in Figure 1 is taken from an article by
Dorrit Hoffleit (2001). The 1m telescope at the Las Campanas
Observatory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington is named after her
-- not because of her work, but because she donated the funds with which
the telescope was purchased.
What did Swope (1937) find? V725 Sgr was one of 700 new variables
discovered in a survey of Milky Way Field 187. Swope immediately
recognized it as unusual, so she measured it on all available Harvard
plates -- over 800 in all, spanning 1899 to 1935. Between 1899 and 1926,
the variability (if any) of this 12th-magnitude star was small and not
obviously periodic. In 1926, the photographic amplitude was 0.3 and the
period was 12 days. Between 1926 and 1935, the photographic amplitude
exceeded one magnitude, and the period gradually and smoothly increased
from 12 to 21 days. This was unprecedented behavior!
The Star Languishes
For the next three decades, the star was virtually ignored. Then Serge
Demers (1973) reported photoelectric observations in 1968 and 1969 which
suggested that the star varied irregularly with a V amplitude of 0.4
magnitude, and a possible period of 45 to 50 days. He reported that
Tsesevich had inspected Harvard plates from 1936 to 1949 and had seen
very little variation, though it is not clear how accurate and reliable
the measurements were. Demers also extended and systematized the study
of the changing mean magnitude of the star. Demers had a special
interest in Population II Cepheids; he had completed a doctoral thesis
on the subject with Don Fernie at the University of Toronto.
Demers and Barry Madore (1974) reported further photoelectric and
photographic observations which were consistent with a period of about
50 days and an amplitude of 0.4 magnitude. There was some suggestion
that the mean V magnitude of the star might be brightening: 12.59 in
1968, 12.52 in 1969, and 12.45 in 1973, but the data were few, and the
secular increase was small, compared with the pulsation amplitude. But
then the star languished again.
AAVSO Observers to the Rescue!
I was reminded about this star by my colleague Amelia Wehlau, who had
once again (Wehlau et al. 1998) called attention to its remarkable
behavior. It turned out that AAVSO observer Danie Overbeek, in South
Africa, had been systematically observing the star, visually, since
1985. His observations continued until shortly before his death in 2001.
Fortunately, Peter Williams, in Australia, began observing it in 1999,
and continues to do so. Danie's colleague in Johannesburg, Hugh Lund,
obtained over a year of CCD observations from 1998 to 1999.
Amelia Wehlau knew that I was always looking for interesting research
projects for students, and she offered the data that Danie, Peter, and
Hugh had sent her. A student was available -- Anna Molak, an outstanding
senior high school student in the University of Toronto Mentorship
Program. She carried out the analysis. The results have recently
appeared in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the
Pacific, with all of us as co-authors (Percy et al. 2006). I am
delighted that Anna then went on to study physics at Amelia's university
(the University of Western Ontario, in London, Ontario), and spent the
summer of 2006 doing further research in the astronomy group there.
How to Analyze Such a Strange Dataset
Time-series analysis is not straightforward when the period of the star
is changing rapidly. Wavelet analysis would be one approach, and it
would be useful to reanalyze the data with the wavelet software on the
AAVSO website. We chose to use two other techniques: self-correlation
analysis (Percy et al. 1993; Percy & Mohammed 2004), and the
combination of Fourier analysis and least-squares fitting in the
Period04 package (Lenz & Breger 2005). Inspection of the light
curves, of course, is always an important first step.
Self-correlation (SC) is a simple method of time-series analysis which
measures the cycle-to-cycle behavior of the star, averaged over all the
data. It has proven, in a series of papers (see Percy & Mohammed
2004), to be a useful adjunct to Fourier analysis. Our software is
publicly available at
http://www.astro.utoronto.ca/~percy/index.html.
The Period04 package is also publicly available, at
http://www.univie.ac.at/tops/Period04.
Together with the AAVSO's TS time-series package, these provide an
excellent toolkit for analysis of variable star data. See Templeton
(2004) for an excellent introduction to time-series analysis in
astronomy.
And What Did We Find?
We began by digitizing the pre-1926 data that Swope analyzed. Between
1899 and 1926, the variability of V725 Sgr was close to the noise level,
but we noted that there was a slight but consistent minimum in the
self-correlation diagram at a period of 5-9 days (1899-1915) and 8-10
days (1915-1926), indicating a tendency for the star to vary on these
time scales. For the data from 1922-1925, there was a clear minimum at
about 9 days in the diagram.
The variability was clearly not strictly periodic. The Period04
program was used to apply a two-period fit to each of six post-1985
datasets: the Lund CCD photometry, the Williams visual photometry, and
four 4-year groupings of the Overbeek visual photometry. We arbitrarily
chose to limit the fit to two periods. There is no evidence that the
star is actually doubly or multi-periodic, as opposed to having a single
period with variable amplitude; the data are not sufficient to make that
distinction. And because of the seasonal gaps, there is the possibility
of alias periods in the Fourier spectra. [Self-correlation analysis is
not affected by alias periods.] The seasonal datasets are also not well
suited for finding periods of over 100 days, because of their finite
length, and the irregularity of the variability. The results are as
follows:
In each case, the dominant period was only semi-regular, so the
uncertainties in the dominant periods are greater than the values given
in the Table.
 |
| Determinations of the period of V725 Sgr, with estimated error
bars, versus epoch. The determinations prior to 1926 are uncertain. |
The figure shows our best estimate of how the dominant period has
changed with time. Aside from Swope's data from 1925 to 1935, the data
have been less complete than we would have preferred. But the trend is
clear. The star has increased its period by an order of magnitude in a
century.
There is also some evidence for a gradual increase in mean visual
magnitude from 12.2 in 1985-88 to 12.4 in 1999-2004 but, given the
uncertainly of at least 0.1 in these means, the increase cannot be
regarded as significant. The mean V magnitude in 1998-1999 was 12.30,
compared with the mean value of 12.55 found by Demers (1973). This
change is in the opposite sense to that of the visual observations. A
look at the AAVSO on-line light curve, which is well-covered from JD
2445500 on, also suggests that any variations in mean magnitude are lost
in the noise.
In interpreting any apparent change in the mean magnitude, we must
remember that the visual or V magnitude of a star can change because its
luminosity changes, or if its temperature changes. In the latter case,
a different fraction of the star's luminosity will appear in the visual
or V band.
What's Going On?
At the time of discovery, the variability properties of V725 Sgr were
those of a Population II Cepheid. I'm not aware that there are any
direct observations of the star's composition or motion, which would
confirm that it was Population II, as opposed to Population I. The
Population II label is based entirely on its unstable variability. The
variability properties are now those of a pulsating red giant, much like
the several dozen red giants on the AAVSO Photoelectric Photometry
program. Recently, Tom Lloyd Evans obtained a spectrum of the star, and
confirmed that the spectrum was indeed that of a red giant.
In order to understand what might account for V725's unique behavior, it
is worth reviewing what is known about the nature of Population II
Cepheids. Population II stars are older than the sun, and have masses
similar to or less than that of the sun. They generally have lower
abundances of the elements heavier than helium than the sun does.
Population II Cepheids have periods of about 1 to 100 days. The
short-period stars are called BL Herculis stars, the long-period stars
generally have RV Tauri characteristics -- alternating deep and shallow
minima. That leaves the medium-period stars, which are called W
Virginis stars. You will find good articles, in the Variable Star of
the Month/Season archives, on W Vir (Davis, 2003) and on the RV Tauri
stars U Mon (Malatesta, 2003) and R Sct (Malatesta, 2000).
 |
| Figure 6. The evolutionary changes of a low-mass star, shown on
the Hertzsprung-Russell graph of power versus surface temperature. We
hypothesize that V725 Sgr is an asymptotic-giant branch star which,
because of a helium shell flash, is making a "blue loop" to hotter
temperatures, and becoming a yellow supergiant in the Cepheid
instability strip. (Credit: R. Hollow, CSIRO.) |
All of these variable types are in advanced stages of evolution, so we
should also review what is known about the structure and evolution of
sun-like stars in these geriatric phases. As they exhaust the hydrogen
fuel in their cores, fusing it into helium, they swell up and become red
giants. On the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram which plots luminosity or
power against temperature (Figure 6), the star is said to move upward
along the "giant branch" (RGB). When the temperature at the center of the
core becomes high enough, the helium ignites in a "helium flash". The
external results are not very dramatic. The star readjusts, contracts,
and becomes a stable star fusing helium in its core, and continuing to
fuse hydrogen in a thin shell around the core. On the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, it sits on the "horizontal branch" (HB). As the
star uses up its helium fuel, it again expands to become a red giant.
Its path on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram is slightly different, but
gradually approaches the giant branch, so astronomers call it the
"asymptotic giant branch" (AGB).
The nature of the BL Herculis stars is fairly clear; they are beginning
to evolve from the horizontal branch to higher luminosities and cooler
temperatures. The nature of the brightest RV Tauri stars is also fairly
clear: they have finished their lives as red giants, and are contracting
to become hot white dwarfs. But how do the W Virginis stars get to be
yellow stars? Why do they lie in the Cepheid instability strip in the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram?
During the 1960's, Martin Schwarzschild, Richard Härm, and others
discovered that stars that were fusing helium in a shell around a core
of carbon "ash" were unstable, and underwent "helium shell flashes"; see
Schwarzschild & Härm (1970), for instance. The observable result
is that, for a few thousand years, the star undergoes a "blue loop" on
the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, from the asymptotic giant branch to the
realm of the yellow Population II Cepheids.
This phase would be a transient one, which might explain why Population
II Cepheids have unstable periods -- and why AAVSO observers should
therefore monitor them! One Population II Cepheid, RU Cam, actually
decreased its amplitude from over a magnitude to almost zero in 1966.
It was Serge Demers, in the course of his thesis work (Demers & Fernie
1966) who discovered this unprecedented behavior.
Could V725 Sgr be completing a blue loop? To test this idea, we
consulted the most comprehensive set of asymptotic giant branch models
available, those of Vassiliadis & Wood (1993). Conveniently, the
models are avialble on-line, at www.mso.anu.edu.au/~wood/ftp.html.
Sure enough, the changes in the period and brightness of V725 Sgr are
consistent with the end of a helium shell flash. These events are rare.
We are fortunate that Henrietta Swope found this star and studied it,
and that AAVSO observers continued to monitor it.
Observing V725 Sgr
V725 Sgr clearly needs to be monitored on a regular basis. So do other
Population II Cepheids. For those of you with patience, the period may
continue to increase dramatically in the next decade or two. Or it may
not; the star may be permanently re-settled on the asymptotic-giant
branch. Even then, there may be some small period change that can be
detected by measuring the times of maximum brightness, and using the
(O-C) method.
There is also the possibility that the irregularity of V725 Sgr is
actually multiperiodicity. In that case, sufficient observations may
reveal a second or third period. Each period provides additional
information, to compare with theory, to determine the properties and
nature of this unique star.
CCD observations would obviously be desirable, but visual observations
are useful too, especially if they are systematic, and as complete as
possible. Charts are available from the AAVSO website.
Final Thoughts
The tale of V725 Sgr indicates one way, and one reason why amateurs can
contribute significantly to astronomy. In this case, a survey was
undertaken. One star proved to be of more than routine interest.
Professionals neglected it; there are many more interesting variable
stars than professional astronomers to observe them. Amateur observers
came to the rescue. And the analysis was done by a bright student on
the road to a scientific career. So everyone benefitted.
Even larger surveys are now being undertaken, looking for gravitational
microlenses, transiting exoplanets, supernovae, gamma-ray bursts, and
other interesting objects. New variable stars are being discovered by
the thousands, as by-products of these surveys. Among these thousands
are unique variables that have much to tell us. Amateur astronomers
have the time, the skill, the equipment, and the motivation to observe
them. It's a win-win situation!
References
- Davis, K. 2003, "Not Your Classical Cepheid"
- Demers, S. 1973, Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, 67, 19.
- Demers, S. & Madore, B.F. 1974, IAU Information Bulletin on Variable Stars., 870.
- Hoffleit, D. 2001, Journal of the AAVSO, 30, 62.
- Lenz, P. & Breger, M. 2005, Communications in Asteroseismology, 146, 53.
- Malatesta, K. 2000, "A Favorite Among Its Class"
- Malatesta, K. 2003, "At the Top of Its Class"
- Percy, J.R., Molak, A., Lund, H., Overbeek, D., Wehlau, A.F. &
Williams, P.F. 2006, Publications of the Astronomical Society
of the Pacific, 118, 805.
- Percy, J.R., Ralli, J. & Sen, L.V. 1993, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 105, 287.
- Percy, J.R. & Mohammed, F. 2004, Journal of the AAVSO, 32, 9.
- Schwarzschild, M. & Härm, R. 1970, Astrophysical Journal, 160, 341.
- Swope, H. 1937, Harvard College Observatory Annals, 105, 26, 499.
- Templeton, M. 2004, Journal of the AAVSO, 32, 41.
- Turner, D.G., Savoy, J., Derrah, J., Abdel-Sabour Abdel-Latif, M., & Berdnikov, L.N. 2005, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 117, 207.
- Turner, D.G., Abdel-Sabour Abdel-Latif, M., & Berdnikov, L.N. 2006, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 118, 410.
- Wehlau, A., Atcheson, T., & Demers, S. 1998, in A Half Century of Stellar Pulsation Interpretations, ed. P.A. Bradley & J.A. Guzik, ASP Conference Series, 135, 171.
- Vassiliadis, E. & Wood, P.R. 1993, Astrophysical Journal, 413, 641.
This month's Variable Star of the Season was
prepared by Dr. John Percy.