| When stars initiate core helium fusion, the star can 
							become unstable and pulsate. In fact, there are 
							several regions on an 
							H-R diagram that are 
							instability zones. If a stars evolution passes 
							through one of these zones, pulsations can occur:
 
							 (Image Credit - Swinburne Astronomy Online)
 Variable stars are named after a prototype star 
							that exhibits a particular pulsation period.  What makes the star pulsate are the expanding and 
							contracting of a stars outer shell. As the star 
							increases in size, so does 
							luminosity - the opposite 
							for contraction. Increased heat from inside the star 
							causes the expansion - the expansion then causes 
							cooling. The cooled layers contract only to be 
							heated again. One of the more famous variables stars is the 
							family of Cepheid variable stars. Discovered by 
							Henrietta Leavitt, these stars have a pronounced 
							Period-Luminosity relationship. Longer period 
							Cepheid were brighter than shorter period Cepheids. Because they are 
							luminous, they can be seen over great distanced. 
							Using the
							distance modulus, it is possible to use the 
							Cepheid variable as a 
							ruler for interstellar 
							measurements. 
							 (Image credit: Brooks/Cole Thomson Learning)
 
							Cepheid rulers have been used for nearby 
							galaxies, but Type 1a supernova are better for 
							intergalactic distances. RR Lyrae variable also make good rulers, and are 
							commonly found in 
							globular clusters. However, they 
							pulsate faster and have about a 1
							magnitude 
							variation in 
							brightness. Classes of Variable Stars: 
								
									| Variable Type: | Population Type: | Period of 
									Variability: |  
									| Long-Period Variables | Population I and Population II | 100 - 700 days |  
									| Classical Cepheids | Population I | 1 - 50 days |  
									| Type II Cepheids (W Virginis Stars) | Population II | 2 - 45 days |  
									| RR Lyrae Stars | Population II | 1.5 - 24 hours |  
									| delta Scuti Stars | Population I | 1 - 3 hours |  
									| beta Cephei Stars | Population I | 3 - 7 hours |  
									| ZZ Ceti Stars | Population I | 100 - 1000 seconds |  Another class of Variable star is the cataclysmic 
							variable star. These are destructive events. There 
							are no know patterns to these types of variable 
							stars: 
								
								Classical Nova - recurrent explosions of a 
								star-white dwarf binary pair
								recurrent nova - a white dwarf binary that 
								continues pulling material from a host starSupernova - the life's end of a large star Only the recurring nova can be termed a "variable 
							star" although the variability is unpredictable. More on this is available in 
							Stellar Evolution in 
							both the 
							low mass and 
							high mass sections. Back 
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