
doi: 10.1086/152488
Observations in the 16 to 28 micron spectral band made with an infrared photometer mounted at the Cassegrain f/10 focus of a 2.24-m telescope are discussed. The stars observed belonged to classes B through M and included several carbon and S stars. Most of them are Mira, semiregular, or irregular variables. The remaining 12 stars are nonvariable objects of which the brightest (both in the visible and infrared) are alpha-Boo and alpha-Tau. Since 16 of the Mira stars varied during the period of observation, it is concluded that they are probably intrinsic variables at 20 microns. There is no conclusive evidence for variation of any other star. Because the variation at this wavelength originates largely in circumstellar shells for most of these stars, the nonvariability suggests that these shells are stable phenomena, at least on a time scale of a year.
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