Measurements of secular period change probe real-time stellar evolution of
classical Cepheids making these measurements powerful constraints for stellar
evolution models, especially when coupled with interferometric measurements. In
this work, we present stellar evolution models and measured rates of period
change for two Galactic Cepheids: Polaris and l Carinae, both important
Cepheids for anchoring the Cepheid Leavitt law (period-luminosity relation).
The combination of previously-measured parallaxes, interferometric angular
diameters and rates of period change allows for predictions of Cepheid mass
loss and stellar mass. Using the stellar evolution models, We find that l Car
has a mass of about 9 M⊙ consistent with stellar pulsation models, but
is not undergoing enhanced stellar mass loss. Conversely, the rate of period
change for Polaris requires including enhanced mass-loss rates. We discuss what
these different results imply for Cepheid evolution and the mass-loss mechanism
on the Cepheid instability strip.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, Poster presented at IAU307: New windows on massive
stars: asteroseismology, interferometry, and spectropolarimetry, Editors: G.
Meynet, C. Georgy, J.H. Groh & Ph. Ste