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Rho Cassiopeiae

Rho Cassiopeiae (/ˌr kæsiəˈp, -si-, -/; ρ Cas, ρ Cassiopeiae) is a yellow hypergiant star in the constellation Cassiopeia. It is about 3,400 light-years (1,000 pc) from Earth, yet can still be seen by the naked eye as it is over 300,000 times brighter than the Sun. On average it has an absolute magnitude of −9.5, making it visually one of the most luminous stars known. Its diameter measures between 400 and 500 times that of the Sun, approximately 627,000,000 kilometers (4.19 AU; 390,000,000 mi), or about twice the size of the Earth's orbit.

Rho Cassiopeiae

Location of Rho Cassiopeiae in the Cassiopeia constellation.
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Cassiopeia
Right ascension 23h 54m 23.0s[1]
Declination +57° 29′ 58″[1]
Apparent magnitude (V) 4.1 to 6.2[2]
Characteristics
Spectral type G2Iae[3] (F8pIa-K0pIa-0)[2]
U−B color index 1.15[4]
B−V color index 1.26[4]
Variable type SRd[2]
Astrometry
Radial velocity (Rv)−47[3] km/s
Proper motion (μ) RA: −4.54[1] mas/yr
Dec.: −3.45[1] mas/yr
Parallax (π)0.9470 ± 0.2021 mas[5]
Distance1,050±210[6] pc
Absolute magnitude (MV)–9.5[7]
Details
Mass40[7] M
Radius636–981[8] R
Luminosity302,000–530,000,[8] 129,000[6] L
Surface gravity (log g)0.1[3] cgs
Temperature4,571–6,044[8] K
Metallicity [Fe/H]0.3[9] dex
Rotational velocity (v sin i)25[10] km/s
Age4-6[7] Myr
Other designations
7 Cassiopeiae, HR 9045, BD+56°3111, HD 224014, SAO 35879, FK5 899, HIP 117863, GC 33160
Database references
SIMBADdata

Rho Cassiopeiae is a single star, and is categorized as a semiregular variable. As a yellow hypergiant, it is one of the rarest types of stars. Only a few dozen are known in the Milky Way, but it is not the only one in its constellation which also contains V509 Cassiopeiae.[11]

Observation

 
Visual light curve for Rho Cas from 1933 to 2015

The Bayer designation for this star was established in 1603 as part of the Uranometria, a star catalog produced by Johann Bayer, who placed this star in the sixth magnitude class.[citation needed] The star catalog by John Flamsteed published in 1712, which orders the stars in each constellation by their right ascension, gave this star the Flamsteed designation 7 Cassiopeiae.

Rho Cas was first described as variable in 1901. It was classified only as "pec." with a small but definite range of variation.[12] Its nature continued to be unclear during the deep visual minimum in 1946, although it was presumed to be related to the detection of an expanding shell around the star. The spectrum developed lower excitation features described as typical of an M star rather than the previous F8 class.[13] The nature of Rho Cas was eventually clarified as a massive luminous unstable star, pulsating and losing mass, and occasionally becoming obscured by strong bouts of mass loss.[14]

Rho Cas usually has an apparent magnitude near 4.5, but in 1946 it unexpectedly dimmed to 6th magnitude and cooled by over 3,000 Kelvin, before returning to its previous brightness. A similar eruption was recorded in 1893, suggesting that it undergoes these eruptions approximately once every 50 years. This happened again in 2000–2001, when it was observed by the William Herschel Telescope.[15]

In 2013, a shell ejection produced dramatic spectral changes and a drop of about half a magnitude at visual wavelengths.[16] Weak emission lines of metals and doubled H-α absorption lines were detected in late 2014, and unusual tripled absorption lines in 2017.[17] The brightness peaked at magnitude 4.3 before fading to 5th magnitude. In 2018 it brightened again to magnitude 4.2.[18]

The original Hipparcos parallax publication estimated Rho Cas at around 0.28 mas, which would have corresponded to a distance around 10,000 light years and would have made Rho Cas among the farthest stars visible to the naked eye.[19][20][21] However, more recent publications estimate Rho Cas with a much larger parallax, corresponding to a much shorter distance.

Properties

 
From left to right: the Sun (small, faint dot on the far left representing 1 R – too small to be visible in this thumbnail), the Pistol Star, Rho Cassiopeiae, Betelgeuse, and VY Canis Majoris. The orbits of Jupiter ( 5.23 AU) and Neptune ( 30.11 AU) are included for comparison.

Rho Cassiopeiae is one of the most luminous yellow stars known. It is close to the Eddington luminosity limit and normally loses mass at around 10−6 M/yr, hundreds of millions of times the rate of the solar wind. Much of the time it has a temperature over 7,000 K, a radius around 400 R, and pulsates irregularly producing small changes in brightness. Approximately every 50 years it undergoes a larger outburst and blows off a substantial fraction of its atmosphere, causing the temperature to drop around 1,500 K and the brightness to drop by up to 1.5 magnitudes. In 2000–2001 the mass loss rate jumped to 5×10−2 M/yr, ejecting in total approximately 3% of a solar mass or 10,000 Earth masses.[10][15] The luminosity remains roughly constant during the outbursts at half a million L, but the radiation output shifts towards the infra red.

Surface abundances of most heavy elements on Rho Cas are enhanced relative to the Sun, but carbon and oxygen are depleted. This is expected for a massive star where hydrogen fusion takes place predominantly via the CNO cycle. In addition to the expected helium and nitrogen convected to the surface, sodium is strongly enhanced, indicating that the star had experienced a dredge-up while in a red supergiant stage. Therefore, it is expected that Rho Cas is now evolving towards hotter temperatures. It is currently core helium burning through the triple alpha process.[9]

 
ρ Cassiopeiae in optical light

The relatively low mass and high luminosity of a post-red supergiant star is a source of instability, pushing it close to the Eddington Limit. However, yellow hypergiants lie in a temperature range where opacity variations in zones of partial ionisation of hydrogen and helium cause pulsations, similar to the cause of Cepheid variable pulsations. In hypergiants, these pulsations are generally irregular and small, but combined with the overall instability of the outer layers of the star they can result in larger outbursts. This may all be part of an evolutionary trend towards hotter temperatures through the loss of the star's atmosphere.[9]

Naming

ρ Cassiopeiae is a member of the Chinese constellation Flying Serpent 螣蛇 (Téng Shé), in the Encampment mansion. In order, the 22 member stars are α and 4 Lacertae, π2 and π1 Cygni, stars 5 and 6, HD 206267, 13 and ε Cephei, β Lacertae, σ, ρ, τ, and AR Cassiopeiae, 9 Lacertae, 3, 7, 8, λ, ψ, κ, and ι Andromedae. Consequently, the Chinese name for ρ Cassiopeiae is 螣蛇十二 (Téng Shé shíèr, English: the Twelfth Star of Flying Serpent)[22]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Van Leeuwen, F. (2007). "Validation of the new Hipparcos reduction". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 474 (2): 653–664. arXiv:0708.1752. Bibcode:2007A&A...474..653V. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20078357. S2CID 18759600.
  2. ^ a b c "GCVS Query=Rho Cas". General Catalogue of Variable Stars @ Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow, Russia. Retrieved 2010-11-24.
  3. ^ a b c Klochkova, V. G.; Panchuk, V. E.; Tavolganskaya, N. S.; Usenko, I. A. (2013). "Instability of the kinematic state in the atmosphere of the hypergiant Rho Cas outside outburst". Astronomy Reports. 58 (2): 101–111. arXiv:1312.6922v1. Bibcode:2014ARep...58..101K. doi:10.1134/S1063772913120044. S2CID 119297330.
  4. ^ a b Ducati, J. R. (2002). "VizieR Online Data Catalog: Catalogue of Stellar Photometry in Johnson's 11-color system". CDS/ADC Collection of Electronic Catalogues. 2237: 0. Bibcode:2002yCat.2237....0D.
  5. ^ Brown, A. G. A.; et al. (Gaia collaboration) (August 2018). "Gaia Data Release 2: Summary of the contents and survey properties". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 616. A1. arXiv:1804.09365. Bibcode:2018A&A...616A...1G. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201833051. Gaia DR2 record for this source at VizieR.
  6. ^ a b Klochkova, V. G. (2019). "Unity and Diversity of Yellow Hypergiants Family". Astrophysical Bulletin. 74 (4): 475–489. arXiv:1911.09387. Bibcode:2019AstBu..74..475K. doi:10.1134/S1990341319040138. S2CID 208202411.
  7. ^ a b c Gorlova, N.; Lobel, A.; Burgasser, Adam J.; Rieke, G. H.; Ilyin, I.; Stauffer, J. R. (2006). "On the CO Near‐Infrared Band and the Line‐splitting Phenomenon in the Yellow Hypergiant ρ Cassiopeiae". The Astrophysical Journal. 651 (2): 1130–1150. arXiv:astro-ph/0607158. Bibcode:2006ApJ...651.1130G. doi:10.1086/507590. S2CID 15599266.
  8. ^ a b c van Genderen, A. M.; Lobel, A.; Nieuwenhuijzen, H.; Henry, G. W.; De Jager, C.; Blown, E.; Di Scala, G.; Van Ballegoij, E. J. (2019). "Pulsations, eruptions, and evolution of four yellow hypergiants". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 631: A48. arXiv:1910.02460. Bibcode:2019A&A...631A..48V. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201834358. S2CID 203836020.
  9. ^ a b c Israelian, G.; Lobel, A.; De Jager, C.; Musaev, F. (1998). "The Variable Spectrum of the Yellow Hypergiant rho Cassiopeiae". ASP Conf. Ser. 154: 1601. Bibcode:1998ASPC..154.1601I.
  10. ^ a b Lobel, A.; Israelian, G.; De Jager, C.; Musaev, F.; Parker, J. Wm.; Mavrogiorgou, A. (1998). "The spectral variability of the cool hypergiant rho Cassiopeiae". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 330: 659. Bibcode:1998A&A...330..659L.
  11. ^ Israelian, G.; Lobel, A.; Schmidt, M. R. (1999). "The Yellow Hypergiants HR 8752 and ρ Cassiopeiae near the Evolutionary Border of Instability". The Astrophysical Journal. 523 (2): L145. arXiv:astro-ph/9908308. Bibcode:1999ApJ...523L.145I. doi:10.1086/312283. S2CID 18269688.
  12. ^ Pickering, E. C.; Colson, H. R.; Fleming, W. P.; Wells, L. D. (1901). "Sixty-four new variable stars". Astrophysical Journal. 13: 226. Bibcode:1901ApJ....13..226P. doi:10.1086/140808.
  13. ^ Beardsley, Wallace R. (1953). "The spectrum of ρ Cassiopeiae". Astronomical Journal. 58: 34. Bibcode:1953AJ.....58...34B. doi:10.1086/106807.
  14. ^ Sheffer, Yaron; Lambert, David L. (1986). "Spectroscopic observations of yellow supergiants. I – Radial pulsations of Rho Cassiopeiae". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 98: 914. Bibcode:1986PASP...98..914S. doi:10.1086/131844.
  15. ^ a b Lobel, A.; Dupree, A. K.; Stefanik, R. P.; Torres, G.; Israelian, G.; Morrison, N.; De Jager, C.; Nieuwenhuijzen, H.; Ilyin, I.; Musaev, F. (2003). "High‐Resolution Spectroscopy of the Yellow Hypergiant ρ Cassiopeiae from 1993 through the Outburst of 2000–2001". The Astrophysical Journal. 583 (2): 923–954. arXiv:astro-ph/0301238. Bibcode:2003ApJ...583..923L. doi:10.1086/345503. S2CID 18587770.
  16. ^ Kraus, M.; Kolka, I.; Aret, A.; Nickeler, D. H.; Maravelias, G.; Eenmäe, T.; Lobel, A.; Klochkova, V. G. (2019). "A new outburst of the yellow hypergiant star ρ Cas". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 483 (3): 3792–3809. arXiv:1812.03065. Bibcode:2019MNRAS.483.3792K. doi:10.1093/mnras/sty3375.
  17. ^ Klochkova, V. G.; Panchuk, V. E.; Tavolzhanskaya, N. S. (2018). "Changes of the Optical Spectrum of the Hypergiant ρ Cas due to a Shell Ejection in 2013". Astronomy Reports. 62 (9): 623–635. arXiv:1808.00220. Bibcode:2018ARep...62..623K. doi:10.1134/S1063772918090068. S2CID 119348731.
  18. ^ Loughney, D. (2018). "Rho Cassiopeiae - an Update (Abstract)". Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers (Jaavso). 46 (2): 192. Bibcode:2018JAVSO..46R.192L.
  19. ^ "Rho Cassiopeiae (7 Cassiopeiae) Star Facts". Universe Guide. 25 January 2015. Retrieved 29 December 2019.
  20. ^ King, Bob (29 March 2017). "Finite Light — Why We Always Look Back In Time". Universe Today. Retrieved 29 December 2019.
  21. ^ "How to See the Farthest Thing You Can See". Sky & Telescope. 9 September 2015. Retrieved 29 December 2019.
  22. ^ 陳輝樺 (Chen Huihua), ed. (7 July 2006). "Activities of Exhibition and Education in Astronomy" 天文教育資訊網 (in Chinese). Retrieved 10 June 2015.

External links

  • Rho Cassiopeiae fact sheet
  • David Darling site
  • Big and Giant Stars: Rho Cassiopeiae

cassiopeiae, cassiopeiae, yellow, hypergiant, star, constellation, cassiopeia, about, light, years, from, earth, still, seen, naked, over, times, brighter, than, average, absolute, magnitude, making, visually, most, luminous, stars, known, diameter, measures, . Rho Cassiopeiae ˌ r oʊ k ae s i e ˈ p iː aɪ s i oʊ iː r Cas r Cassiopeiae is a yellow hypergiant star in the constellation Cassiopeia It is about 3 400 light years 1 000 pc from Earth yet can still be seen by the naked eye as it is over 300 000 times brighter than the Sun On average it has an absolute magnitude of 9 5 making it visually one of the most luminous stars known Its diameter measures between 400 and 500 times that of the Sun approximately 627 000 000 kilometers 4 19 AU 390 000 000 mi or about twice the size of the Earth s orbit Rho CassiopeiaeLocation of Rho Cassiopeiae in the Cassiopeia constellation Observation dataEpoch J2000 Equinox J2000Constellation CassiopeiaRight ascension 23h 54m 23 0s 1 Declination 57 29 58 1 Apparent magnitude V 4 1 to 6 2 2 CharacteristicsSpectral type G2Iae 3 F8pIa K0pIa 0 2 U B color index 1 15 4 B V color index 1 26 4 Variable type SRd 2 AstrometryRadial velocity Rv 47 3 km sProper motion m RA 4 54 1 mas yr Dec 3 45 1 mas yrParallax p 0 9470 0 2021 mas 5 Distance1 050 210 6 pcAbsolute magnitude MV 9 5 7 DetailsMass40 7 M Radius636 981 8 R Luminosity302 000 530 000 8 129 000 6 L Surface gravity log g 0 1 3 cgsTemperature4 571 6 044 8 KMetallicity Fe H 0 3 9 dexRotational velocity v sin i 25 10 km sAge4 6 7 MyrOther designations7 Cassiopeiae HR 9045 BD 56 3111 HD 224014 SAO 35879 FK5 899 HIP 117863 GC 33160Database referencesSIMBADdataRho Cassiopeiae is a single star and is categorized as a semiregular variable As a yellow hypergiant it is one of the rarest types of stars Only a few dozen are known in the Milky Way but it is not the only one in its constellation which also contains V509 Cassiopeiae 11 Contents 1 Observation 2 Properties 3 Naming 4 References 5 External linksObservation Edit Visual light curve for Rho Cas from 1933 to 2015 The Bayer designation for this star was established in 1603 as part of the Uranometria a star catalog produced by Johann Bayer who placed this star in the sixth magnitude class citation needed The star catalog by John Flamsteed published in 1712 which orders the stars in each constellation by their right ascension gave this star the Flamsteed designation 7 Cassiopeiae Rho Cas was first described as variable in 1901 It was classified only as pec with a small but definite range of variation 12 Its nature continued to be unclear during the deep visual minimum in 1946 although it was presumed to be related to the detection of an expanding shell around the star The spectrum developed lower excitation features described as typical of an M star rather than the previous F8 class 13 The nature of Rho Cas was eventually clarified as a massive luminous unstable star pulsating and losing mass and occasionally becoming obscured by strong bouts of mass loss 14 Rho Cas usually has an apparent magnitude near 4 5 but in 1946 it unexpectedly dimmed to 6th magnitude and cooled by over 3 000 Kelvin before returning to its previous brightness A similar eruption was recorded in 1893 suggesting that it undergoes these eruptions approximately once every 50 years This happened again in 2000 2001 when it was observed by the William Herschel Telescope 15 In 2013 a shell ejection produced dramatic spectral changes and a drop of about half a magnitude at visual wavelengths 16 Weak emission lines of metals and doubled H a absorption lines were detected in late 2014 and unusual tripled absorption lines in 2017 17 The brightness peaked at magnitude 4 3 before fading to 5th magnitude In 2018 it brightened again to magnitude 4 2 18 The original Hipparcos parallax publication estimated Rho Cas at around 0 28 mas which would have corresponded to a distance around 10 000 light years and would have made Rho Cas among the farthest stars visible to the naked eye 19 20 21 However more recent publications estimate Rho Cas with a much larger parallax corresponding to a much shorter distance Properties Edit From left to right the Sun small faint dot on the far left representing 1 R too small to be visible in this thumbnail the Pistol Star Rho Cassiopeiae Betelgeuse and VY Canis Majoris The orbits of Jupiter 5 23 AU and Neptune 30 11 AU are included for comparison Rho Cassiopeiae is one of the most luminous yellow stars known It is close to the Eddington luminosity limit and normally loses mass at around 10 6 M yr hundreds of millions of times the rate of the solar wind Much of the time it has a temperature over 7 000 K a radius around 400 R and pulsates irregularly producing small changes in brightness Approximately every 50 years it undergoes a larger outburst and blows off a substantial fraction of its atmosphere causing the temperature to drop around 1 500 K and the brightness to drop by up to 1 5 magnitudes In 2000 2001 the mass loss rate jumped to 5 10 2 M yr ejecting in total approximately 3 of a solar mass or 10 000 Earth masses 10 15 The luminosity remains roughly constant during the outbursts at half a million L but the radiation output shifts towards the infra red Surface abundances of most heavy elements on Rho Cas are enhanced relative to the Sun but carbon and oxygen are depleted This is expected for a massive star where hydrogen fusion takes place predominantly via the CNO cycle In addition to the expected helium and nitrogen convected to the surface sodium is strongly enhanced indicating that the star had experienced a dredge up while in a red supergiant stage Therefore it is expected that Rho Cas is now evolving towards hotter temperatures It is currently core helium burning through the triple alpha process 9 r Cassiopeiae in optical lightThe relatively low mass and high luminosity of a post red supergiant star is a source of instability pushing it close to the Eddington Limit However yellow hypergiants lie in a temperature range where opacity variations in zones of partial ionisation of hydrogen and helium cause pulsations similar to the cause of Cepheid variable pulsations In hypergiants these pulsations are generally irregular and small but combined with the overall instability of the outer layers of the star they can result in larger outbursts This may all be part of an evolutionary trend towards hotter temperatures through the loss of the star s atmosphere 9 Naming Editr Cassiopeiae is a member of the Chinese constellation Flying Serpent 螣蛇 Teng She in the Encampment mansion In order the 22 member stars are a and 4 Lacertae p2 and p1 Cygni stars 5 and 6 HD 206267 13 and e Cephei b Lacertae s r t and AR Cassiopeiae 9 Lacertae 3 7 8 l ps k and i Andromedae Consequently the Chinese name for r Cassiopeiae is 螣蛇十二 Teng She shier English the Twelfth Star of Flying Serpent 22 References Edit a b c d Van Leeuwen F 2007 Validation of the new Hipparcos reduction Astronomy and Astrophysics 474 2 653 664 arXiv 0708 1752 Bibcode 2007A amp A 474 653V doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20078357 S2CID 18759600 a b c GCVS Query Rho Cas General Catalogue of Variable Stars Sternberg Astronomical Institute Moscow Russia Retrieved 2010 11 24 a b c Klochkova V G Panchuk V E Tavolganskaya N S Usenko I A 2013 Instability of the kinematic state in the atmosphere of the hypergiant Rho Cas outside outburst Astronomy Reports 58 2 101 111 arXiv 1312 6922v1 Bibcode 2014ARep 58 101K doi 10 1134 S1063772913120044 S2CID 119297330 a b Ducati J R 2002 VizieR Online Data Catalog Catalogue of Stellar Photometry in Johnson s 11 color system CDS ADC Collection of Electronic Catalogues 2237 0 Bibcode 2002yCat 2237 0D Brown A G A et al Gaia collaboration August 2018 Gaia Data Release 2 Summary of the contents and survey properties Astronomy amp Astrophysics 616 A1 arXiv 1804 09365 Bibcode 2018A amp A 616A 1G doi 10 1051 0004 6361 201833051 Gaia DR2 record for this source at VizieR a b Klochkova V G 2019 Unity and Diversity of Yellow Hypergiants Family Astrophysical Bulletin 74 4 475 489 arXiv 1911 09387 Bibcode 2019AstBu 74 475K doi 10 1134 S1990341319040138 S2CID 208202411 a b c Gorlova N Lobel A Burgasser Adam J Rieke G H Ilyin I Stauffer J R 2006 On the CO Near Infrared Band and the Line splitting Phenomenon in the Yellow Hypergiant r Cassiopeiae The Astrophysical Journal 651 2 1130 1150 arXiv astro ph 0607158 Bibcode 2006ApJ 651 1130G doi 10 1086 507590 S2CID 15599266 a b c van Genderen A M Lobel A Nieuwenhuijzen H Henry G W De Jager C Blown E Di Scala G Van Ballegoij E J 2019 Pulsations eruptions and evolution of four yellow hypergiants Astronomy and Astrophysics 631 A48 arXiv 1910 02460 Bibcode 2019A amp A 631A 48V doi 10 1051 0004 6361 201834358 S2CID 203836020 a b c Israelian G Lobel A De Jager C Musaev F 1998 The Variable Spectrum of the Yellow Hypergiant rho Cassiopeiae ASP Conf Ser 154 1601 Bibcode 1998ASPC 154 1601I a b Lobel A Israelian G De Jager C Musaev F Parker J Wm Mavrogiorgou A 1998 The spectral variability of the cool hypergiant rho Cassiopeiae Astronomy and Astrophysics 330 659 Bibcode 1998A amp A 330 659L Israelian G Lobel A Schmidt M R 1999 The Yellow Hypergiants HR 8752 and r Cassiopeiae near the Evolutionary Border of Instability The Astrophysical Journal 523 2 L145 arXiv astro ph 9908308 Bibcode 1999ApJ 523L 145I doi 10 1086 312283 S2CID 18269688 Pickering E C Colson H R Fleming W P Wells L D 1901 Sixty four new variable stars Astrophysical Journal 13 226 Bibcode 1901ApJ 13 226P doi 10 1086 140808 Beardsley Wallace R 1953 The spectrum of r Cassiopeiae Astronomical Journal 58 34 Bibcode 1953AJ 58 34B doi 10 1086 106807 Sheffer Yaron Lambert David L 1986 Spectroscopic observations of yellow supergiants I Radial pulsations of Rho Cassiopeiae Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 98 914 Bibcode 1986PASP 98 914S doi 10 1086 131844 a b Lobel A Dupree A K Stefanik R P Torres G Israelian G Morrison N De Jager C Nieuwenhuijzen H Ilyin I Musaev F 2003 High Resolution Spectroscopy of the Yellow Hypergiant r Cassiopeiae from 1993 through the Outburst of 2000 2001 The Astrophysical Journal 583 2 923 954 arXiv astro ph 0301238 Bibcode 2003ApJ 583 923L doi 10 1086 345503 S2CID 18587770 Kraus M Kolka I Aret A Nickeler D H Maravelias G Eenmae T Lobel A Klochkova V G 2019 A new outburst of the yellow hypergiant star r Cas Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 483 3 3792 3809 arXiv 1812 03065 Bibcode 2019MNRAS 483 3792K doi 10 1093 mnras sty3375 Klochkova V G Panchuk V E Tavolzhanskaya N S 2018 Changes of the Optical Spectrum of the Hypergiant r Cas due to a Shell Ejection in 2013 Astronomy Reports 62 9 623 635 arXiv 1808 00220 Bibcode 2018ARep 62 623K doi 10 1134 S1063772918090068 S2CID 119348731 Loughney D 2018 Rho Cassiopeiae an Update Abstract Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers Jaavso 46 2 192 Bibcode 2018JAVSO 46R 192L Rho Cassiopeiae 7 Cassiopeiae Star Facts Universe Guide 25 January 2015 Retrieved 29 December 2019 King Bob 29 March 2017 Finite Light Why We Always Look Back In Time Universe Today Retrieved 29 December 2019 How to See the Farthest Thing You Can See Sky amp Telescope 9 September 2015 Retrieved 29 December 2019 陳輝樺 Chen Huihua ed 7 July 2006 Activities of Exhibition and Education in Astronomy 天文教育資訊網 in Chinese Retrieved 10 June 2015 External links EditRho Cassiopeiae fact sheet David Darling site Big and Giant Stars Rho Cassiopeiae Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rho Cassiopeiae amp oldid 1149658691, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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