Investigating Cepheid $\ell$ Carinae's Cycle-to-cycle Variations via Contemporaneous Velocimetry and Interferometry
R.I. Anderson, A. M\'erand, P. Kervella, J. Breitfelder, J.-B., LeBouquin, L. Eyer, A. Gallenne, L. Palaversa, T. Semaan, S. Saesen, N., Mowlavi

TL;DR
This study combines interferometry and spectroscopy to investigate cycle-to-cycle variability in the Cepheid star Carinae, revealing potential modulated angular and radial velocity variations that could impact distance measurement techniques.
Contribution
It provides the first tentative evidence of modulated angular diameter variability in Carinae, suggesting a time-dependent projection factor affecting Cepheid distance measurements.
Findings
Tentative evidence for modulated angular diameter variability.
Cycle-to-cycle differences observed in radial velocity variability.
Indications of a time-dependent projection factor affecting measurements.
Abstract
Baade-Wesselink-type (BW) techniques enable geometric distance measurements of Cepheid variable stars in the Galaxy and the Magellanic clouds. The leading uncertainties involved concern projection factors required to translate observed radial velocities (RVs) to pulsational velocities and recently discovered modulated variability. We carried out an unprecedented observational campaign involving long-baseline interferometry (VLTI/PIONIER) and spectroscopy (Euler/Coralie) to search for modulated variability in the long-period (P 35.5 d) Cepheid Carinae. We determine highly precise angular diameters from squared visibilities and investigate possible differences between two consecutive maximal diameters, . We characterize the modulated variability along the line-of-sight using 360 high-precision RVs. Here we report tentative evidence for modulated angular…
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