Rotation and lithium abundance of solar-analog stars. Theoretical analysis of observations
J. D. do Nascimento Jr, J.S. da Costa, and J.R. De Medeiros

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between rotation, lithium abundance, and convective zone depth in solar-analog stars using stellar models, finding no direct correlation and suggesting the need for additional mixing processes.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new grid of stellar models for solar-analog stars and analyzes their properties, highlighting the insufficiency of classical models to explain lithium dispersion.
Findings
No significant correlation between convection zone mass and lithium abundance.
Classical convection models cannot fully explain lithium dispersion in solar-analog stars.
Extra-mixing processes like shear mixing are likely needed to explain lithium behavior.
Abstract
Rotational velocity, lithium abundance, and the mass depth of the outer convective zone are key parameters in the study of the processes at work in the stellar interior, in particular when examining the poorly understood processes operating in the interior of solar-analog stars. We investigate whether the large dispersion in the observed lithium abundances of solar-analog stars can be explained by the depth behavior of the outer convective zone masses, within the framework of the standard convection model based on the local mixing-length theory. We also aims to analyze the link between rotation and lithium abundance in solar-analog stars. We computed a new extensive grid of stellar evolutionary models, applicable to solar-analog stars, for a finely discretized set of mass and metallicity. From these models, the stellar mass, age, and mass depth of the outer convective zone were…
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