Principal Component Analysis of Cepheid Variable Stars
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1 Principal Component Analysis of Cepheid Variable Stars SUNY Oswego Saturday, November 9 th, 2013
2 Variable Stars stars whose size and luminosity are variable happens almost exclusively in giants occurs mainly in stars which lie in the instability strip
3 Classical Cepheid Variable Stars population I (high metallicity) 4 20 solar masses up to solar luminosities pulsation period can range from days to months period-luminosity relationship
4 Classical Cepheid Variable Stars population I (high metallicity) 4 20 solar masses up to solar luminosities pulsation period can range from days to months period-luminosity relationship
5 Classical Cepheid Variable Stars population I (high metallicity) 4 20 solar masses up to solar luminosities pulsation period can range from days to months period-luminosity relationship
6 Classical Cepheid Variable Stars population I (high metallicity) 4 20 solar masses up to solar luminosities pulsation period can range from days to months period-luminosity relationship
7 Lightcurves Figure: Lightcurves of different classes of variable stars
8 Cepheid Period-Luminosity Relationship A 0 mean magnitude = a log P period +c a Cepheid s period of oscillation is related to its mean luminosity approximate a linear model which gives a and c this makes A 0 a function of log P and some constants ( ) d m = 5 log 5 10 apparent magnitude M absolute magnitude d = 10 m M 5 +1 distance in parsecs
9 Hubble s Law v redshift velocity = H 0 d Hubble s distance constant Hubble s law describes the velocity of the expansion of the Universe redshift measurements give us v Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) only gives us a measure of H 2 0 Ω independent measure of H 0 is needed to find density of Universe, Ω
10 Fourier Analysis of Lightcurves Figure: Fundamental Mode Cepheid in the LMC with 7 th order Fourier fit from OGLEIII assume basis lightcurve to be sinusoidal find values of best fit for A 0, A k and Φ k for n th order fit, requires 2n + 1 parameters A(t) mag. at time t = A 0 mean mag + n k=1 A k scaling sin( k scaling ωt + Φ k ) shift
11 Fourier Parameters versus log P Figure: Fourier parameter ratios of 1829 fundamental mode Cepheids in LMC
12 Principal Component Analysis of Lightcurves data decides the basis lightcurves construct a matrix of all the stars lightcurves stacked vertically find the covariance matrix of this matrix (A T A) eigenvectors (EV) of the covariance matrix are the basis lightcurves scalar coefficents are the principle scores (P C) n th order fit requries only n parameters for each star, in addition to the n eigenvectors for the whole dataset P C i = A EV i n A = P C i EV i i=1 Figure: First 100 rows of input matrix
13 Principal Component Analysis of Lightcurves Figure: Cepheids with varying order fits
14 Principal Scores versus log P Figure: Principal scores 1 and 2 as functions of log P for 1829 fundamental mode Cepheids in LMC
15 Cepheid Period Luminosity Relationship A 0 = a log P + c
16 Cepheid Period Luminosity Color Relationship A 0 = a log P + c A 0 = a log P +b(b V )+c
17 Cepheid Period Luminosity Principal Component Relationship A 0 = a log P + c A 0 = a log P +b(b V )+c A 0 = a log P + bp C 1 + c
18 Cepheid Period Luminosity Principal Component Relationship A 0 = a log P + c A 0 = a log P +b(b V )+c A 0 = a log P + bp C 2 + c
19 Period Luminosity Principal Component Relationship Figure: A 0 fitted with P C 1 vs log P Figure: A 0 fitted with P C 2 vs log P
20 Acknowledgements Shashi Kanbur, Chow-Choong Ngeow, Sukanta Deb, Harinder P. Singh, Earl Bellinger, Zachariah Schrecengost, Ruka Murugan, NSF Office of International Science and Engineering award number , Indo-U.S. Knowledge R&D Joint Networked Center for the Analysis of Variable Star Data.
21 References url: url: url: Deb, Sukanta and Harinder P. Singh. Light curve analysis of Variable stars using Fourier decomposition and Principle component analysis. In: (2011). Ngeow, Chow-Choong and Shashi Kanbur et al. Preliminary Analysis of ULPC Light Curves Using Fourier Decomposition Technique. In: (2013). Ngeow, Chow-Choong and Shashi M. Kanbur et al. Theoretical Cepheid Period-Luminosity and Period-Color Relations in Spitzer IRAC Bands. In: (2013). Singh, Harinder P., Ravi K. Gulati, and Ranjan Gupta. Stellar spectral classification using principle component analysis and artificial neural networks. In: (1998). Turner, David G. The Progenitors of Classical Cepheid Variables. In: (1995).
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