by Ann » Wed May 10, 2023 6:40 pm
paulhummerman wrote: ↑Tue May 09, 2023 11:24 am
What's the time-scale of this animation? Visible wavelengths?
APOD Robot wrote:
Plentiful in M15, RR Lyrae stars are evolved pulsating variable stars whose brightness and pulsation period, typically less than a day, are related.
So if we assume that the typical pulsation period of a RR Lyrae star is, say, 20 hours, I guess you can just stare at one pulsating star and see how many times it goes through a full pulsation cycle to figure out what length of time the animation covers.
As for the wavelengths of the pulsating stars, they belong to spectral classes A and F, so they are going to be a bit whiter than the Sun. I don't know if they change color as they pulsate, but they might change a little, if they are similar to the Cepheid stars in that regard.
As for the classical Cepheids, they get a bit bluer when they are brighter and redder when they are fainter, or at least that is how I read
this figure.
Note that classical Cepheids are both brighter and redder than RR Lyrae stars. They also pulsate more slowly.
Ann
[quote=paulhummerman post_id=330875 time=1683631476 user_id=147098]
What's the time-scale of this animation? Visible wavelengths?
[/quote]
[quote]APOD Robot wrote:
Plentiful in M15, RR Lyrae stars are evolved pulsating variable stars whose brightness and [b][color=#FF00FF]pulsation period, typically less than a day[/color][/b], are related.[/quote]
So if we assume that the typical pulsation period of a RR Lyrae star is, say, 20 hours, I guess you can just stare at one pulsating star and see how many times it goes through a full pulsation cycle to figure out what length of time the animation covers.
As for the wavelengths of the pulsating stars, they belong to spectral classes A and F, so they are going to be a bit whiter than the Sun. I don't know if they change color as they pulsate, but they might change a little, if they are similar to the Cepheid stars in that regard.
As for the classical Cepheids, they get a bit bluer when they are brighter and redder when they are fainter, or at least that is how I read [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Cepheid_variable#/media/File:Delta_cephei_ubvri_engle_2014.png]this figure[/url].
Note that classical Cepheids are both brighter and redder than RR Lyrae stars. They also pulsate more slowly.
Ann