CEPHEID STARS AND
THE DISTANCES OF THE GALAXIES

Frédéric DAHRINGER
"EAAE Summerschools" Working Group
CLEA - France

Abstract

The aim of this activity is to discover that:

d Cephei, the star.


fig. 1

A small lexicon.

Light variations of d Cephei.

The next data give us the apparent magnitude in visual wave-lengths, me, according to the date of the observations ; rather the same time each day (observations of Mr Schweitzer, 1979, in Astronomies , A. Acker et C. Joshed).

One compare Cepheid with stars in the neighbourhood which magnitudes are near of the different magnitudes of d Cephei. (Argelander method).
0f course, the observations have be done during the nights and with clear sky so it is not possible to have data exactly for one or two whole periods.
So, we can use the "phases-method" we have the estimate the value of the period and then we calculate how many periods have spend from first observation ~ the very day cant. This number is not integer; the decimal part is the "phase" and will lie the abscises on the diagram.
It will work as if we had the values only for one period.
To avoid too many calculations, we shall use a graphic method. The data will give us several pieces of the curve that we will put together to obtain a periodic curve. It works as if we delete the periods without observations.

The result is rather the same that the vault given in first paragraph.

What is a Cepheid star?

The Cepheid stars are at a particular moment of the evolution of stars, between red giant stars and white dwarf.
The fusion of Hydrogen is at its end in the centre of the star an Helium stars to "burn" giving a lot of energy. This energy permits the Hydrogen fusion in a belt around the nuclear of the star. The star become instable and deliver energy, periodically, so that its brightness and diameter have periodic variations.

The "Period - apparent magnitude" relation

Henrietta Leawitt's discovery.

During 1912, Henrietta Leavitt measured periods and apparent magnitudes of 24 Cepheid stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud.

Light curves of four of them are given on fig 3

We shall measure the period and the mean apparent magnitude cf these four Cepheid stars and then build the graph

mv = mean apparent magnitude P = period

using aise the other data given

we obtain an affine function:

mv = a log P + b

The sizes of the Small Magellanic Cloud are very small cornpared to its distance te us ; so we can consider that all the stars are at the same distance of us.
In consequence, the relation between period and apparent magnitude that we have différence of a constant number (m - M = 5 log d - 5).
This constant number can be obtaintd when we measure the periode of a Cepheid star which distance is known.
in the opposite, if we measure the period of a Ccpheid star, we shall know its absolute magnitude ; comparing it with its apparent magnitude we can calculate its distance.

Relation between periode and absolute magnitude.

Observing Cepheid stars of our galaxie (the Milky Way) which distances are known, Krafts has obtained, in 1961, the data below.

The curve = f (logP) is a straight line nearly parallel to the straight line concerning the Cepheid stars in Small Magellanic Cloud.
The difference between mv and Mv permits us to calculate the distance of the Small Magellanic Cloud.

Mv = 5 log d - 5 = 15,5.

So d = 50 000 parsecs = 1 630 000 light-year

Nowadays we accept the value : 4 200 000 l.y

Conclusion.

This discovery cf the relation between period and magnitude has been very important: Henrietta Leawitt is the first famous astronomer women, though she has not been encouraged in her work by her colleagues.
This relation has been used by Hubble to prove that the M 31 Nebula was another galaxy, far from the Milky Way.
However, we can use this method only to measure the nearby galaxies in which we can distinguish Cepheid stars. We have also to increase in the calculation, the effect of light absorption in intergalactic space, which modify the apparent magnitude.
During the last years, this relation has been recalculated with the very accurate data that we have got with the Hipparcos satellite.

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