for RW Cephei, plotted from
Hipparcos data The magnitude range of RW Cephei was given as 8.2–8.8 using
photographic plates in the initial report, while later studies found the photographic range to be from 8.6–10.7, noting that maxima and minima cannot be derived with any certainty. Other authors estimate an amplitude of only around 0.5 magnitudes. Modern estimates put the range of variability from 6.0 to 7.6 in the V-band. RW Cephei has been classified as a semi-regular
variable star of type
SRd, meaning that it is a slowly varying yellow giant or supergiant. The
General Catalogue of Variable Stars cites a 1952 study giving a period of approximately 346 days, while other studies suggest different periods and certainly no strong periodicity.
Great dimming In December of 2022, the star was reported by two astronomers to be going through a "great dimming", reaching a fainter than usual magnitude of 7.6. It was speculated to be caused by short periods of enhanced
mass loss leading to the condensation of
dust that partially obscures the stellar
photosphere. This was later confirmed by observations with the CHARA array, revealing a dark patch on the western side of the star suggested to be a dust cloud released in a recent surface mass ejection. An unusually bright maximum attained in 2019 right before the dimming was suspected to be caused by an energetic convective upwelling of hot gas, later being expelled and cooling into a dust cloud obscuring the star. The event is compared to the great dimming of
Betelgeuse that happened in late 2019 and the dimming events seen in the historical light curve of
VY Canis Majoris. Spectra taken by an amateur astronomer show the appearance of several new emission lines during the dimming, most notably
H-α and the
K I lines at 766.5 and 769.9 nm. The H-α line is
blueshifted by ~40 km/s relative to the star, suggesting the source of the emission is expanding outwards. Previous observations using photographic plates taken between 1948 and 1951 reveal a similar dimming from magnitude 9.16 down to 9.5, followed by a rapid re-brightening to magnitude 8.9. == Spectrum ==