Volume 35 number 1 (2007)
Light variations are a common feature of red giant stars. Recent studies have shown that the amplitude of the light variations steadily increases along the giant branch, from microvariable and irregular K giants to semiregular and Mira-type M giants. Recent accurate photoelectric studies actually suggest that all stars among late K and M giants are variable to some degree. In particular, Jorissen et al. (1997) provide evidence that there is a minimum variability amplitude for a given spectral type, which increases with decreasing stellar surface temperature (or later spectral type). We summarize their results in this paper. The first light curves of microvariable K giants, with semi-amplitudes ~10 millimag (in the Strömgren y band) on time scales of 5 to 10 days, are also presented. Such patterns could characterize all microvariable K giants, but need tight time sampling and high photometric accuracy to be revealed.