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A theoretical investigation of the pulsation behavior of so-named ``anomalous Cepheids is presented. The study is based on nonlinear convective pulsation models with $Z$=0.0001 and 0.0004, mass in the range 1.3-2.2 Mo and various luminosity levels. Based on these computations, we derive period, bolometric light curves and the edges of the instability strip, showing that a variation of the metal abundance from Z=0.0001 to 0.0004 has quite small effects on these quantities. Then, using bolometric corrections and color-temperature transformations, we are able to provide the predicted relations connecting pulsational properties (periods, amplitudes) with magnitudes and colors in the various photometric bands. The theoretical pulsational scenario is compared to observed anomalous Cepheids in dwarf spheroidal galaxies and, in particular, the predicted mass-dependent Period-Magnitude-Amplitude and Period-Magnitude-Color relations are used to estimate individual mass values, as well as to discriminate between fundamental (F) and first-overtone (FO) pulsators.
We discuss the observed pulsation properties of Type II Cepheids (TIICs) in the Galaxy and Magellanic Clouds. The period (P) distributions, luminosity amplitudes and population ratios of the three different sub-groups (BL Herculis[BLH, P<5 days], W V
We present the results of a theoretical investigation aimed at testing whether full amplitude, nonlinear, convective models account for the I-band light curves of Bump Cepheids in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We selected two objects from the OGL
Anomalous Cepheids are a rather rare family of pulsating variables preferably found in dwarf galaxies. Attempts to model these variable stars via single-star evolution scenarios still leave space for improvements to better grasp their origin. Focusin
The VISTA near-infrared $YJK_mathrm{s}$ survey of the Magellanic Clouds System (VMC, PI M.-R. L. Cioni) is collecting deep $K_mathrm{s}$-band time-series photometry of the pulsating variable stars hosted in the system formed by the two Magellanic Clo
The quantity and quality of satellite photometric data strings is revealing details in Cepheid variation at very low levels. Specifically, we observed a Cepheid pulsating in the fundamental mode and one pulsating in the first overtone with the Canadi