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 , 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 , 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 , ejecting in total approximately 3% of a
solar mass or . The luminosity remains roughly constant during the outbursts at , but the radiation output shifts towards the infrared. In 2023, Rho Cassiopeiae was imaged through
interferometry at the
CHARA array. The star was observed at the
H and
K near-infrared wavelengths, and the results gave an
angular diameter of . At the adopted distance of 2,500 to ( to light-years), this gives a physical radius of or , comparable to
Betelgeuse. Large
convection cells (hot spots) and cold spots also had been observed, as well as the star's extended circumstellar envelope. 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. 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. ==Evolution==