V473 Lyr, a modulated, period-doubled Cepheid, and U TrA, a double-mode Cepheid observed by MOST
L. Moln\'ar, A. Derekas, R. Szab\'o, J. M. Matthews, C. Cameron, A. F., J. Moffat, N. D. Richardson, B. Cs\'ak, \'A. D\'ozsa, P. Reed, L. Szabados,, B. Heathcote, T. Bohlsen, P. Cacella, P. Luckas, \'A. S\'odor, M. Skarka, Gy., M. Szab\'o, E. Plachy, J. Kov\'acs, N. R. Evans

TL;DR
This study uses space-based photometry to analyze two Cepheids, revealing the first period doubling in a classical Cepheid and providing new insights into mode interactions and amplitude modulation in these stars.
Contribution
First detection of period doubling in a classical Cepheid and phase lag measurement for a second-overtone Cepheid, advancing understanding of pulsation mode interactions.
Findings
Period doubling detected in V473 Lyr, a classical Cepheid.
Identified potential $f_X$ mode in U TrA, with ambiguity.
No significant period change in U TrA over 50 years.
Abstract
Space-based photometric measurements first revealed low-amplitude irregularities in the pulsations of Cepheid stars, but their origins and how commonly they occur remain uncertain. To investigate this phenomenon, we present MOST space telescope photometry of two Cepheids. V473 Lyrae is a second-overtone, strongly modulated Cepheid, while U Trianguli Australis is a Cepheid pulsating simultaneously in the fundamental mode and first overtone. The nearly continuous, high-precision photometry reveals alternations in the amplitudes of cycles in V473 Lyr, the first case of period doubling detected in a classical Cepheid. In U TrA, we tentatively identify one peak as the or 0.61-type mode often seen in conjunction with the first radial overtone in Cepheids, but given the short length of the data, we cannot rule out that it is a combination peak instead. Ground-based photometry and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
