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How To Decipher Those Classification Codes
Warning: This page is long, and gets a bit technical in places. Why
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The classification of variable stars has been evolving for more than a
century. As our understanding grows (and new types of objects are
discovered), the classification criteria change.
Many years ago, many classes of variable were described in terms of a
prototype star; and astronomers would define new classes to encompass
minor observational differences from known variables. Adding to the
confusion, many variables would be in two or more classes depending on
the criteria used to describe them.
Modern variable star taxonomy is more generic. Seven major categories
are now recognised:
- Eruptive
variation caused by flares or shell ejection;
eg: flare stars, T Tau variables, RCBs, S Doradus stars.
- Pulsating
radial or non-radial pulsation eg: Miras
and semiregular variables, Cepheids, RV Tau stars.
- Rotating
variation caused by starspots, magnetism, or
changing shape. eg: pulsars, elliptical stars and magnetic
variables.
- Cataclysmic
variation caused by explosions of the star or
an accretion disc. Includes dwarf novae, classic novae & supernovae.
- Eclipsing
binaries where one component passes in front of
the other, as seen by the observer.
- X-ray
variable X-ray emission, usually from neutron star
or black hole component of a binary, and often optically variable too.
- Unique
Unclassifiable & generally wierd variables!
There are numerous subcategories within each of these.
Some variables still fall into more than one class; this is indicated by
a "+" joining the classification codes together. The following list
describes all the classes mentioned in the 4th General Catalogue of
Variable Stars (GCVS). The special suffix ":" in the GCVS and other
lists is used to indicate a doubtful entry.
Eruptive Variables
- FU = FU Ori. A slow rise (up to 7 mags) over many months to a
maximum lasting for several years; followed by the development of an
emission spectrum.
- GCAS = Gamma Cas. Rapidly rotating blue giants which occasionally
eject a ring of matter from their equator, causing a fade up to 1.5
mags.
- I = Irregular. Poorly studied variable of unknown spectral type.
Most of these get reclassified as knowledge improves.
- IA = Poorly studied blue to white irregular.
- IB = Poorly studied yellow to red irregular.
- IN = Orion variables, young stars & protostars in or near nebulae.
Irregular variations up to several magnitudes. There are several
subspecies indicated by one or more suffixes: "S" = rapid variations
(>1.0 mags in 1 to 10 days), "A" = blue to white star, "B" = yellow
to red star, "T" = T Tauri variables (intense iron emission lines), (YY)
= spectral evidence for infalling matter. The letter "N" is omitted
if there is no association with a nebula.
- RCB = R Coronae Borealis. Hydrogen-poor, helium and carbon-rich
stars showing small cyclic pulsations; and irregular fades up to 9
magnitudes lasting for weeks/months caused by carbon ejection. These
stars can disappear in just a few hours!
- RS = RS CVn. Close binaries with chromospheric activity, causing
very small light variations. Eclipses and X-ray variablity often seen as
well.
- SDOR = S Doradus. Massive, very luminous blue stars usually
surrounded by expanding envelopes. Often associated with nebulae.
Occasional outbursts up to 7 magnitudes, lasting for months, caused by
ejection of a shell of matter.
- UV = UV Cet. Red dwarf stars showing outbursts up to 6 magnitudes
lasting for only a few minutes, caused by flares.
- UVN = UV's in nebulae. They may actually be a subspecies of INB
variables.
- WR = Wolf-Rayet stars. Emission lines of carbon & nitrogen and
evidence for unstable mass outflow as a "stellar wind".
Pulsating Variables
- ACYG = Supergiants with multiple non-radial pulsations and
emission spectra. Very small variations with periods of weeks.
- BCEP = Beta Cep. Blue stars with variations 0.1-0.3 mags and
periods 0.1-0.7 days, caused by radial pulsations. Multiple periods are
common.
- BCEPS = Subspecies of BCEP, with much smaller variations and
periods < 0.1 day.
- BLBOO = BL Boo. Anomalously bright RRAB variables (see below).
- CEP = Cepheids. Radially pulsating white to yellow giants with
variations up to 2 magnitudes and periods from 1 to over 100 days. Most
of these are reclassified into the next few classes.
- CW = W Vir stars. Old radially pulsating stars belonging to the
galactic halo (Population II). Periods from 0.8 to 35 days and
variations up to 1.3 magnitudes. A period-luminosity relationship
applies: max absolute visual mag is about = -0.2-2.5*log(period).
Lightcurves are superficially similar to DCEP for periods 3-10 days; but
spectral features are different. The suffixes "A" or "B" indicate
periods greater than or less than 8 days.
- DCEP = Delta Cep or "classic" Cepheids. Young radially pulsating
stars belonging to the galactic disc (Population I). Their
period-luminosity relationship is: maximum absolute visual mag = -1.67-2.54*log(period).
- DCEPS = Subspecies of DCEP with symmetrical lightcurves and
periods < 7 days.
- DSCT = Delta Sct. Pulsating stars belonging to the galactic disc
(Population I). Variations up to 0.9 mag with multiple radial &
non-radial pulsations of periods < 0.2 day.
- DSCTC = Subspecies of DSCT with variations < 0.1 mag.
- L = Slow irregular variables. Many of these are reclassified
after further study. LB and LC indicate giant and supergiant
stars.
- M = Mira (Omicron Cet). Red giants with emission spectra and
well-defined periods from 80 to over 1000 days. Variations from 2.5 to
11 magnitudes or more; and variations do not repeat exactly from one
cycle to the next. Some of these stars have distinct multiple periods.
- PVTEL = PV Tel. Pulsating helium-rich supergiants with variations
< 0.1 mag. May be related to WR class.
- RR = RR Lyr. Radially pulsating stars of the galactic halo
(Population II); often found in globular clusters. Periods < 1.3
days and variations < 2 mags. Suffixes "AB" or "C" indicate
asymmetric or symmetric lightcurves. Some of these stars exhibit the
Blazhko Effect - periodic variations in period and lightcurve.
- RV = RV Tauri. Radially pulsating yellow to red supergiants with
alternating primary and secondary minima. The "period" is actually the
time between two adjacent primary minima. Variations up to 4 mags with
periods of 30 to 150 days. Suffixes "A" and "B" indicate constant mean
magnitude or varying mean magnitude (up to 2 mags with periods 500-2000
days).
- SR = Semiregular. Red giants with definite periodicity; but with
irregularities. Variations up to 3 mags and periods from 20 days to
several years. There is a continuum between these stars and class M.
- SRA = Semiregulars with persistent periodicity.
- SRB = Semiregulars with poorly defined periodicity.
- SRC = Red supergiant semiregulars.
- SRD = Orange to yellow supergiant semiregulars.
- SXPHE = SX Phe. Galactic halo (Population II) subdwarfs<
resembling DSCT variables.
- ZZ = ZZ Cet. Non-radially pulsating white dwarfs with variations
< 0.2 mag and periods < 30 minutes. Suffixes "A", "B" or "O"
indicate spectral features: hydrogen lines, helium lines, or carbon
lines.
The suffix "(B)" in classes BCEP, CEP, DCEP, RR indicates "beat
frequencies" caused by two or more simultaneous pulsations.
Rotating variables
- ACV = Alpha-2 CVn. White stars showing small variations due to
large "starspots" generated by intense magnetic fields. Intense and
variable spectral lines due to silicon, strontium, chromium and the
lanthanide elements. The suffix "0" indicates rapid non-radial
pulsations as well.
- BY = BY Dra. Red dwarfs with large "starspots". Many of these
are also UV variables.
- ELL = elliptical. Tidally distorted close binary stars, but no
eclipses are observed (see EB class). Variations < 0.1 mag.
- FKCOM = FK Com. Rapidly rotating yellow to orange giants with
non-uniform surface brightness.
- PSR = pulsar with optical as well as radio variations. Optical
variation up to 0.8 mag with period less than 5 seconds.
- R = reflection binaries. A large cool component is illuminated by
a hot component, causing variations up to 1 mag as the system rotates.
- SXARI = SX Ari. High temperature helium-rich versions of ACV
class.
Cataclysmic Variables
- AM = AM Her. Sudden outbursts up to 5 mags, caused by accretion
onto the magnetic poles of a compact object. Light is polarized.
Probably identical to classes XPM and XPRM below.
- N = nova. Sudden outburst from 7 to 19 magnitudes; caused by a
runaway thermonuclear reaction on the surface of a white dwarf component
of a close binary system. Time to rise to maximum ranges from hours to
weeks. Some suffixes indicate the rate of fade: "A" = 3 mags in <
100 days, "AB" = 3 mags in 100-150 days, "B" = 3 mags in > 150
days. Additional suffixes are: "C" = at maximum for more than 10 years (these
may be related to ZAND class below), "L" = poorly studied nova-like
stars, and "R" = recurrent. All novae are believed to be recurrent. However, only a few have
been seen more than once; because the time between outbursts may be
centuries(!) for most novae.
- SN = supernova. Sudden catastropic outburst of 20+ magnitudes in
less than a week, destroying the star. Light output may exceed that of
the entire host galaxy. The total detonation of a white dwarf forms
Type I (suffix "I"), whereas the destruction of a red supergiant forms
Type II (suffix "II"). In practice the types are defined
spectroscopically. Recent research suggests several subclasses within
these types. Supernova 1987A was unusual in several ways. The original star
was a blue supergiant, the outburst took several weeks to reach
maximum, and the explosion was unexpectedly faint. Even so, it was
easily visible to the eye for several weeks!
- UG = U Gem or dwarf nova. Close binary systems with an accretion
disc around the white dwarf component. Outbursts from 2 to 9
magnitudes, lasting for a day or two, occur at quasi-periodic intervals
of days to years. Many of these stars are ultraviolet and X-ray
variable. Most UG's are reclassified into the subspecies UGSS, UGSU and
UGZ after further study.
- UGSS = SS Cyg. A UG subspecies with outbursts lasting for several
days.
- UGSU = SU UMa. UG subspecies with both "normal" outbursts and
occasional superoutbursts (up to 2 mags brighter and about 5-8 times
longer).
- UGZ = Z Cam. UG subspecies which may remain at an intermediate
near-constant magnitude for several cycles after an outburst.
- ZAND = Z And. Close binaries where a hot component actually
orbits inside the extended envelope of its cool giant companion. Small
irregular variations plus occasional outbursts up to 5 magnitudes.
These may be related to the NC class above.
Eclipsing Variables
- E = eclipsing. Binaries where one component periodically passes
in front of the other. Periods range from hours to years.
- EA = Algol. Spherical components, with eclipse times identifiable
from the lightcurve.
- EB = Beta Lyrae. Tidally distorted components, with continuous
changes in brightness. These are related to the ELL class above.
- EW = W UMa. Components almost touching, and primary & secondary
eclipses near-equal. Periods < 1 day. Numerous suffixes may be added to
the eclipsing classes:
- AR = AR Lac. Subgiant components.
- D = detached system.
- DM = detached main-sequence system.
- DS = detached subgiant system.
- DW = detached EW-type system.
- GS = giant or supergiant component.
- K = contact system - the components are joined, and either may
exchange matter with the other.
- KE = contact system with blue or white stars.
- KW = primary is a yellow main-sequence star, secondary is a
hotter subdwarf.
- PN = one of the stars has formed a planetary nebula.
- RS = RS CVn. Additional variation due to starspots, plus radio
and X-ray emission.
- SD = semi-detached system, one component is losing matter to
the other.
- WD = white dwarf component(s).
- WR = Wolf-Rayet component(s).
X-ray variables
This category is characterised by X-ray emissions from binary systems
which are not attributed to any other variable star mechanism. One of
the components is a compact object (white dwarf, neutron star, black
hole). The X-ray emission is caused by matter falling onto the compact
object or its accretion disc. The X-rays then irradiate the companion
star causing a variety of effects. The main classes recognised are:
- XB = X-ray burster. Flares lasting a few minutes, optical
variation up to 0.2 mag.
- XF = X-ray flickerer. X-ray and optical variations on a timescale
of tens of milliseconds.
- XI = X-ray irregular. Variations up to 1 mag on a timescale of
minutes to hours. The companion star is a white dwarf.
- XJ = jets being emitted at several % of speed of light.
- XN = X-ray novae.
- XP = X-ray pulsars. Optical variation up to 4 mags with periods
from 1 second to 2 hours.
- XPR = X-ray pulsars irradiating their companion, causing
reflection variability (see rotating class R).
- XPRM = XPR's with emission of polarized light. Probably identical
to class AM above. If no pulsar is seen, the "P" is omitted.
Additional classes of X-ray variables are still being discovered.
Unique Variables
- BLLAC = BL Lac. Active galactic nuclei, mistakenly identified as
variable stars. Actually related to class QSO.
- CST = constant. Stars mistakenly thought to be variable (very
common in the early days of photographic surveys!).
- GAL = distant galaxies mistakenly thought to be variable (another
photographic blunder!).
- QSO = quasars. Now thought to be active galactic nuclei powered
by a supermassive black hole.
- S = stars with rapid light changes, not yet studied adequately.
- * = generally wierd and unclassifiable variables!
Obsolete and Alternative Classifications
- RW Aur = reclassified to INT and IT.
- Flare stars = UV.
- Beta CMa stars = BCEP.
- Cluster Cepheids = RR.
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