References

[1]

Timothy R. Bedding, Daniel R. Hey, and Simon J. Murphy. A Dance with Dragons: TESS Reveals \ensuremath \alpha Draconis is a Detached Eclipsing Binary. Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society, 3(10):163, October 2019. arXiv:1910.12449, doi:10.3847/2515-5172/ab5112.

[2]

P. Broglia. A delta Scuti Component in the Binary System Y Camelopardalis. Information Bulletin on Variable Stars, 823:1, September 1973.

[3]

W. W. Campbell. Eighteen Stars Whose Radial Velocities Vary. \pasp , 20(123):293, December 1908. doi:10.1086/121853.

[4]

W. W. Campbell and H. D. Curtis. A list of five stars whose velocities in the line of sight are variable. \apj , 18:306–308, November 1903. doi:10.1086/141072.

[5]

A. Colacevich. Provisional Elements of the Spectroscopic Binary \ensuremath \delta Phoenicis. \pasp , 47(276):84, April 1935. doi:10.1086/124553.

[6]

J. A. Crawford. On the Subgiant Components of Eclipsing Binary Systems. \apj , 121:71, January 1955. doi:10.1086/145965.

[7]

S. M. Davis and T. J. Balonek. RZ Cassiopeiae: Evidence for Spots on the Surface of the Primary Star in an Algol-type Eclipsing Binary System. In American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts, volume 189 of American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts, 77.14. December 1996.

[8]

A. Yu. Gamarova, D. E. Mkrtichian, and A. V. Kusakin. Discovery of Rapid Pulsations in the A3 V Component of the Eclipsing Binary System AS Eridani. Information Bulletin on Variable Stars, 4837:1, January 2000.

[9]

John Goodricke. A Series of Observations on, and a Discovery of, the Period of the Variation of the Light of the Bright Star in the Head of Medusa, Called Algol. In a Letter from John Goodricke, Esq. to the Rev. Anthony Shepherd, D. D. F. R. S. and Plumian Professor at Cambridge. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series I, 73:474–482, January 1783.

[10]

R. Elizabeth Griffin. \ensuremath \gamma Per: Bright, but Ill-Understood. In William I. Hartkopf, Petr Harmanec, and Edward F. Guinan, editors, Binary Stars as Critical Tools & Tests in Contemporary Astrophysics, volume 240, 645–649. August 2007. doi:10.1017/S1743921307006151.

[11]

R. F. Griffin, R. E. M. Griffin, L. F. Snyder, K. -P. Schroder, D. Pray, O. Ohshima, T. Tokoro, W. E. Clark, D. B. Williams, M. B. Houchen, K. Arai, K. Krisciunas, and J. Watson. The Eclipse of Gamma Persei. International Amateur-Professional Photoelectric Photometry Communications, 57:31, September 1994.

[12]

W. E. Harper. The Spectroscopic Binary \ensuremath \alpha Draconis. \jrasc , 1:237, August 1907.

[13]

Daniel R. Hey, Angela Kochoska, Richard Monier, Oleg Kochukhov, Cole Johnston, Timothy R. Bedding, Simon J. Murphy, Michael Abdul-Masih, John Southworth, Mads Fredslund Andersen, Frank Grundahl, and Pere L. Pallé. Parameters of the eclipsing binary \ensuremath \alpha Draconis observed by TESS and SONG. \mnras , 511(2):2648–2658, April 2022. doi:10.1093/mnras/stac020.

[14]

A. R. Hogg. The eclipsing system Zeta Phoenicis. \mnras , 111:315, January 1951. doi:10.1093/mnras/111.3.315.

[15]

D. J. Hutter, R. T. Zavala, C. Tycner, J. A. Benson, C. A. Hummel, J. Sanborn, O. G. Franz, and K. J. Johnston. Surveying the Bright Stars by Optical Interferometry. I. A Search for Multiplicity among Stars of Spectral Types F-K. \apjs , 227(1):4, November 2016. arXiv:1609.05254, doi:10.3847/0067-0049/227/1/4.

[16]

Lauri Jetsu and Sebastien Porceddu. Shifting Milestones of Natural Sciences: The Ancient Egyptian Discovery of Algol's Period Confirmed. PLoS ONE, 10:44140, December 2015. arXiv:1601.06990, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0144140.

[17]

F. Kustner. Radial velocities of 99 stars of the second and third spectral classes observed at Bonn. \apj , 27:301–324, June 1908. doi:10.1086/141559.

[18]

P. Lampens, D. Mkrtichian, H. Lehmann, K. Gunsriwiwat, L. Vermeylen, J. Matthews, and R. Kuschnig. Updated modelling and refined absolute parameters of the oscillating eclipsing binary AS Eri. \mnras , 512(1):917–925, May 2022. arXiv:2202.01767, doi:10.1093/mnras/stac289.

[19]

H. C. Lord. Observations of the radial velocities of thirty-one stars made at the Emerson McMillan Observatory. \apj , 21:297–322, May 1905. doi:10.1086/141216.

[20]

Antonia C. Maury and Edward C. Pickering. Spectra of bright stars photographed with the 11-inch Draper Telescope as part of the Henry Draper Memorial. Annals of Harvard College Observatory, 28:1–128, January 1897.

[21]

H. A. McAlister. Masses and luminosities for the giant spectroscopic speckle interferometric binaries gamma Persei and phi Cygni. \aj , 87:563–569, March 1982. doi:10.1086/113130.

[22]

Dean B. McLaughlin. A Note on the Spectrum and Radial Velocity of \ensuremath \gamma Persei. \apj , 88:358, October 1938. doi:10.1086/143990.

[23]

Dean B. McLaughlin. The orbit of gamma Persei. \aj , 53:200, January 1948. doi:10.1086/106121.

[24]

D. E. Mkrtichian, A. V. Kusakin, A. Yu. Gamarova, and V. Nazarenko. Pulsating Components of Eclipsing Binaries: New Asteroseismic Methods of Studies and Prospects. In Conny Aerts, Timothy R. Bedding, and Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard, editors, IAU Colloq. 185: Radial and Nonradial Pulsationsn as Probes of Stellar Physics, volume 259 of Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series, 96. January 2002.

[25]

D. E. Mkrtichian, H. Lehmann, E. Rodríguez, E. Olson, S. -L. Kim, A. V. Kusakin, J. W. Lee, J. -H. Youn, S. -G. Kwon, M. J. López-González, E. Janiashvili, S. K. Tiwari, Santosh Joshi, P. Lampens, P. Van Cauteren, L. Glazunova, A. Gamarova, K. N. Grankin, E. Rovithis-Livaniou, P. Svoboda, R. Uhlar, V. Tsymbal, R. Kokumbaeva, T. Urushadze, K. Kuratov, H. -C. Shin, Y. -W. Kang, and B. Soonthornthum. The eclipsing binary star RZ Cas: accretion-driven variability of the multimode oscillation spectrum. \mnras , 475(4):4745–4767, April 2018. doi:10.1093/mnras/stx2841.

[26]

G. Müller. Ein neuer Veränderlicher vom Algoltypus 77.1906 Cassiopejae. Astronomische Nachrichten, 171(23):357, July 1906. doi:10.1002/asna.19061712303.

[27]

G. Müller and P. Kempf. A new variable star of unusually short period. \apj , 17:201–211, April 1903. doi:10.1086/141011.

[28]

G. Müller and P. Kempf. Ein neuer Veränderlicher von außergewöhnlich kurzer Periode 3.1903 Ursae majoris. Astronomische Nachrichten, 161:141, April 1903. doi:10.1002/asna.19031610810.

[29]

Osamu Ohshima, Shin-Ya Narusawa, Hidehiko Akazawa, Mitsugu Fujii, Tetsuya Kawabata, and Nobuo Ohkura. Detection of the delta Scuti Oscillation in RZ Cassiopeiae. Information Bulletin on Variable Stars, 4581:1, April 1998.

[30]

K. Pavlovski, C. A. Hummel, A. Tkachenko, A. Dervişoğlu, C. Kayhan, R. T. Zavala, D. J. Hutter, C. Tycner, T. Şahin, J. Audenaert, R. Baeyens, J. Bodensteiner, D. M. Bowman, S. Gebruers, N. E. Jannsen, and J. S. G. Mombarg. Dynamical parallax, physical parameters, and evolutionary status of the components of the bright eclipsing binary \ensuremath \alpha Draconis. \aap , 658:A92, February 2022. arXiv:2111.03887, doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202142292.

[31]

Daniel M. Popper and Harold A. McAlister. Gamma Persei–Not Overmassive but Overluminous. \aj , 94:700, September 1987. doi:10.1086/114507.

[32]

A. R. Sandage and M. Schwarzschild. Inhomogeneous Stellar Models. II. Models with Exhausted Cores in Gravitational Contraction. \apj , 116:463, November 1952. doi:10.1086/145638.

[33]

J. Southworth. Rediscussion of eclipsing binaries. Paper 1: the totally-eclipsing B-type system zeta Phoenicis. The Observatory, 140:247–262, December 2020. arXiv:2012.05559, doi:10.48550/arXiv.2012.05559.

[34]

P. Tempesti. The Eclipsing Binary AB Cassiopeiae as a delta Scuti Star. Information Bulletin on Variable Stars, 596:1, December 1971.

[35]

R. E. Wilson. Five stars whose radial velocities are variable. Lick Observatory Bulletin, 8:80–81, January 1914. doi:10.5479/ADS/bib/1914LicOB.8.80W.

[36]

Raymond Harrison Wilson. Construction and use of an interferometer for measurement of close double stars with the eighteen-inch refractor. Continuation of the use of the interferometer for close double star measurements at Flower Observatory. Publications of the University of Pennsylvania Flower Astronomical Observatory, 6:1, January 1941.