This pulsating variable star does interest me and, as it is well observed, there are 
aspects to its displayed behaviour that I find intriguing. I have discussed this star before but here I wanted to record some of the things I have said about it on the BAA discussion forum.
Firstly, on the 15th June 2022 I asked the following (under the title "What's happening to Z Ursae Majoris?"):-
"I am a new member of the BAA and new 
to variable star observing. Like many others, I am sure, I have begun a 
few observations of Z UMa and to find out a bit more about this star I 
have been doing a bit of reading up. One of the most interesting papers 
was by John Greaves in the VSS Circular 184
 (pdf download). What got my attention was that over the last 50 years 
or so John has determined that this star’s period of pulsation has been 
changing. If I have got this right, based on BAA data prior to 1995 
there were two contributing pulsation periods – one main one of 194.0 
days and one less significant one of 204.8 days. After 1995 the period 
has settled down to 189.0 days and there is no evidence for the less 
significant period. What’s more after 2006 the visual magnitude range of
 variations in this star has increased to about 2.8 magnitudes. John 
concluded that the period and magnitude range change are making this 
star more like a Mira variable rather than a semiregular. 
So what is causing these changes? What 
physical changes within the star are causing it to evolve? There is 
another paper in the literature that I found Secular Evolution in Mira Variable Pulsations
 which looked at the changes in the period of 547 Mira variables and for
 about 10 percent of the sample statistically significant long-term 
period changes were seen. Templeton and Mattei believe that changes 
could be caused by thermal pulses (which I take it are caused by flashes
 of nuclear burning in the core?). However, another possible reason that
 they consider for evolutionary changes in the period is non-linear 
behaviour in the physics of the pulsation mechanism.
I am interested to know what other 
people understand about the evolution of these giant stars and whether 
other semiregular stars are showing signs period change."
On the 3rd July 2022 I put up another post under the same topic heading:-
 "Another aspect of the light curve of 
this star that interested me was that from time-to-time the maxima 
appear to be double peaked. This has been shown nicely by some recent 
observations using CMOS detectors (see figure below which has been 
produced from the BAA database). If you look at the light curve after 
the 1st Jan 2022 you can see (green data points) that Z UMa reached a 
maximum of about magnitude 6.6 around the 14th March, then it faded a 
bit to about 7.7 around the 21st April before brightening again to about
 magnitude 6.8 around the 22nd May (roughly 69 days from peak-to-peak). 
The same double peak is seen in the visual data (black circles) but the 
scatter in the CMOS data is much tighter. Looking back at the four 
maxima prior to this the visual data (black circles) hint that this 
double peaked behaviour has been been developing as time progresses.
If you go back further in time other 
reasonably clear examples of a double peak can be seen in August 2016, 
January 2008 to July 2009, January 1999, July 1999 and July 1995 (I 
haven’t gone back further than this). So what is causing this? One 
suggestion has been that this is due to the interaction of different 
pulsation cycles within the star but this is not so easy to understand 
if, as John Greaves says (see my first post), after 1995 there is 
virtually only one pulsation period of 189 days. With more people 
carrying out observations using more accurate electronic detectors it 
will be interesting to see how often this double peaked behaviour 
appears."
Finally, on the 31st March 2023 I added another item under this heading:-
"I was pleased to see that Z UMa has been highlighted in a recent facebook post.
 I have added the light curve of this variable star from this post 
below. As described, in the last year the maxima have become nicely 
double peaked and it has been suggested that this is due to the 
interaction of the two main periods of pulsation of this star. However, 
how does this square with the analysis of John Greaves that after 1995 
there is little evidence for two pulsation periods in the data (see my 
earlier posts on this topic)?
I wondered if the timescales for the 
evolution of the double peak fit in with the two periods of 194.0 and 
204.8 days that John measured before 1995. If you imagine that the two 
pulsation periods start out in phase, then after one period of each the 
peak of the 194.0 day pulsation will be ahead of the 204.8 day pulsation
 by 204.8 – 194.0 = 10.8 days. After n such periods, the shorter 
pulsation would be ahead by n x 10.8 days. Looking at the light curve 
for the star you can see that for the last double peak (September 2022 
to November 2022) the two humps were separated by about 3 months or 
roughly 60 days. This would seem to imply that the two periods would 
have been in phase n = 60/10.8 ~ 6 periods earlier and this certainly 
seems feasible looking at the light curve.
So how often would we expect double 
peaks to be occurring if the two periods of 194.0 and 204.8 days 
persist? The simple linear addition of two sine curves of the same 
amplitude but different periods of A and B would result in another sine 
curve of period 2AB/(A+B) which in this case would be 199.3 days but the
 amplitude of this would be modulated by a cosine curve of 2AB/(A-B) 
which is 7,358 days or about 20 years. However, a cosine curve passes 
through zero twice every period, so the “beat” frequency is half this, 
i.e. every 10 years. This is only a very rough guide because I am sure 
that the behaviour is not linear but it seems reasonable given what I 
said in my earlier posts about how often double peaks occur. 
Interestingly, the amplitude of the light curve variations does decrease
 as a double hump approaches.
What is says to me is that we really 
need more accurate measurements of the light curve to better see what is
 going on. Have the two pulsation periods begun to die out as John says 
or are they being hidden in the noise of the data? Perhaps we need 
regular digital detector monitoring over the next 20 or 30 years to 
decide this. Anyone fancy this?"
 
All text and images © Duncan Hale-Sutton 2025  (except the images kindly provided by the BAA).
 
 
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