Semi-regular red giants as distance indicators I. The period-luminosity relations of semi-regular variables revisited
Michele Trabucchi (1), Nami Mowlavi (1), Thomas Lebzelter (2) ((1), University of Geneva, (2) University of Vienna)

TL;DR
This study revisits semi-regular variables (SRVs) in the Magellanic Clouds, analyzing their pulsation properties and potential as distance indicators, revealing their similarities to Miras and proposing improved classification criteria.
Contribution
It characterizes SRV variability and their relation to Miras, suggesting SRVs can complement Miras as distance indicators and proposing a more physically meaningful classification approach.
Findings
SRVs can serve as effective distance indicators alongside Miras.
Fundamental-mode pulsating SRVs closely resemble Miras in properties.
A new classification criterion involving pulsation periods is recommended.
Abstract
Semi-regular variables (SRVs) are similar to Miras in brightness, and they also follow PLRs, though not necessarily the same as Miras. As potential standard candles they are more challenging than Miras due to their smaller variability amplitudes and less regular light curves, but they are substantially more numerous and especially promising to probe old stellar populations. We aim to characterize the variability of SRVs, with focus on their connection with Miras, in order to prepare the ground for investigating their potential as distance indicators. We examine SRVs and Miras in the Magellanic Clouds from OGLE-III observations, with data from Gaia and 2MASS. After cleaning the sample from variability periods unrelated to pulsation, we classify each source by chemical type and combination of pulsation modes. We examine the results in terms of global photometric and pulsation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
