RR Lyrae variable

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File:HR-diag-instability-strip.svg
The RR Lyrae variable stars fall in a particular area on a Hertzsprung–Russell diagram of color versus brightness.

RR Lyrae variables are periodic variable stars, commonly found in globular clusters. They are used as standard candles to measure (extra) galactic distances, assisting with the cosmic distance ladder. This class is named after the prototype and brightest example, RR Lyrae.

They are pulsating horizontal branch stars of spectral class A or F, with a mass of around half the Sun's. They are thought to have shed mass during the red-giant branch phase, and were once stars at around 0.8 solar masses.

In contemporary astronomy, a period-luminosity relation makes them good standard candles for relatively nearby targets, especially within the Milky Way and Local Group. They are also frequent subjects in the studies of globular clusters and the chemistry (and quantum mechanics) of older stars.

Discovery and recognitionEdit

File:M5 colour magnitude diagram.png
H-R diagram for globular cluster M5, with the horizontal branch marked in yellow and known RR Lyrae stars in green

In surveys of globular clusters, these "cluster-type" variables were being rapidly identified in the mid-1890s, especially by E. C. Pickering. Probably the first star definitely of RR Lyrae type found outside a cluster was U Leporis, discovered by J. Kapteyn in 1890. The prototype star RR Lyrae was discovered prior to 1899 by Williamina Fleming, and reported by Pickering in 1900 as "indistinguishable from cluster-type variables".<ref name=smith2004/>

From 1915 to the 1930s, RR Lyrae variables became increasingly accepted as a class of star distinct from the classical Cepheids, due to their shorter periods, differing locations within the galaxy, and chemical differences. RR Lyrae variables are metal-poor, Population II stars.<ref name="smith2004"/>

RR Lyraes have proven difficult to observe in external galaxies because of their intrinsic faintness. (In fact, Walter Baade's failure to find them in the Andromeda Galaxy led him to suspect that the galaxy was much farther away than predicted, to reconsider the calibration of Cepheid variables, and to propose the concept of stellar populations.<ref name="smith2004"/>) Using the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope in the 1980s, Pritchet and Van Den Bergh found RR Lyrae variables in the Andromeda Galaxy's galactic halo.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> More recently, observations with the Hubble Space Telescope found them in its globular clusters.<ref name=clementini>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Template:AnchorClassificationEdit

The RR Lyrae stars are conventionally divided into three main types,<ref name="smith2004"/> following classification by S.I. Bailey based on the shape of the stars' brightness curves:

  • RRab variables are the most common, making up 91% of all observed RR Lyrae, and display the steep rises in brightness typical of RR Lyrae
  • RRc are less common, making up 9% of observed RR Lyrae, and have shorter periods and more sinusoidal variation
  • RRd are rare, making up between <1% and 30%<ref name=george>Template:Cite journal</ref> of RR Lyrae in a system, and are double-mode pulsators, unlike RRab and RRc

DistributionEdit

File:Variable stars close to the Galactic Centre.jpg
RR Lyrae-type variable stars close to the galactic center from the VVV ESO public survey

RR Lyrae stars were formerly called "cluster variables" because of their strong (but not exclusive) association with globular clusters; conversely, over 80% of all variables known in globular clusters are RR Lyraes.<ref name=clement>Template:Cite journal</ref> RR Lyrae stars are found at all galactic latitudes, as opposed to classical Cepheids, which are strongly associated with the galactic plane.

Because of their old age, RR Lyraes are commonly used to trace certain populations in the Milky Way, including the halo and thick disk.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Several times as many RR Lyraes are known as all Cepheids combined; in the 1980s, about 1900 were known in globular clusters. Some estimates have about 85,000 in the Milky Way.<ref name="smith2004">Template:Cite book</ref>

Though binary star systems are common for typical stars, RR Lyraes are very rarely observed in binaries.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

PropertiesEdit

RR Lyrae stars pulse in a manner similar to Cepheid variables, but the nature and histories of these stars is thought to be rather different. Like all variables on the Cepheid instability strip, pulsations are caused by the κ-mechanism, when the opacity of ionised helium varies with its temperature.

RR Lyraes are old, relatively low mass, Population II stars, in common with W Virginis and BL Herculis variables, the type II Cepheids. Classical Cepheid variables are higher mass population I stars. RR Lyrae variables are much more common than Cepheids, but also much less luminous. The average absolute magnitude of an RR Lyrae star is about +0.75, only 40 or 50 times brighter than the Sun.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Their period is shorter, typically less than one day, sometimes ranging down to seven hours. Some RRab stars, including RR Lyrae itself, exhibit the Blazhko effect in which there is a conspicuous phase and amplitude modulation.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Period-luminosity relationshipsEdit

Unlike Cepheid variables, RR Lyrae variables do not follow a strict period-luminosity relationship at visual wavelengths, although they do in the infrared K band.<ref name=catelan>Template:Cite journal</ref> They are normally analysed using a period-colour-relationship, for example using a Wesenheit function. In this way, they can be used as standard candles for distance measurements although there are difficulties with the effects of metallicity, faintness, and blending. The effect of blending can impact RR Lyrae variables sampled near the cores of globular clusters, which are so dense that in low-resolution observations multiple (unresolved) stars may appear as a single target. Thus the brightness measured for that seemingly single star (e.g., an RR Lyrae variable) is erroneously too bright, given those unresolved stars contributed to the brightness determined. Consequently, the computed distance is wrong, and certain researchers have argued that the blending effect can introduce a systematic uncertainty into the cosmic distance ladder, and may bias the estimated age of the Universe and the Hubble constant.<ref name=ma12>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=lee2014>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=neely2015>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Recent developmentsEdit

The Hubble Space Telescope has identified several RR Lyrae candidates in globular clusters of the Andromeda Galaxy<ref name="clementini"/> and has measured the distance to the prototype star RR Lyrae.<ref name=hst>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The Kepler space telescope provided accurate photometric coverage of a single field at regular intervals over an extended period. 37 known RR Lyrae variables lie within the Kepler field, including RR Lyrae itself, and new phenomena such as period-doubling have been detected.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The Gaia mission mapped 140,784 RR Lyrae stars, of which 50,220 were not previously known to be variable, and for which 54,272 interstellar absorption estimates are available.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The PanSTARRS1 3π survey identified ~45,000 RR Lyrae stars, representing the widest (covering 3/4 of the sky) and deepest (reaching up to 120 kpc) sample of RR Lyrae stars to date. In 2017, Sesar et al. used these stars to develop a novel template-fitting technique, achieving highly accurate period estimates with precision better than 2 seconds in over 80% of cases.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The Dark Energy Survey (DES) was used to identify ~6000 RR Lyrae candidates in the southern sky , ~31% of which are previously undiscovered. The survey also improved period-luminosity relations, advancing distance measurements and studies of galactic structure.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Feng et al.] (2024) used the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey to identify 180 faint RR Lyrae candidates (~21 mag) at galactocentric distances of ~20–300 kpc, with ~100 not previously cataloged in PanSTARRS1 (PS1). The study applied empirical pulsation fitting techniques, originally developed for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), to analyze these candidates.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

RR Lyrae pulsational parameters from the Dark Energy Survey (DES), Pan-STARRS 1 (PS1) and the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey were validated and refined using the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Survey. Keck II's ESI spectrograph was also used to analyze spectra of distant Milky Way halo RR Lyrae candidates to identify background quasar contaminants in previously mentioned surveys.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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