On the interpretation of echelle diagrams for solar-like oscillations. Effect of centrifugal distortion
J.C. Su\'arez, M.J. Goupil, D.R.Reese, R. Samadi, F. Lignieres, M., Rieutord, J. Lochard

TL;DR
This study investigates how slow to moderate stellar rotation influences the interpretation of echelle diagrams in solar-like oscillations, highlighting the importance of second-order corrections and stellar distortion effects for accurate asteroseismic analysis.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis of rotation effects on echelle diagrams, demonstrating the validity of perturbative methods up to certain velocities and emphasizing the need for corrections in mode frequency calculations.
Findings
Perturbative approach valid up to 40-50 km/s rotational velocity.
Second-order rotation corrections are necessary for accurate frequency estimation.
Stellar distortion significantly affects scaled small spacings even at low rotation speeds.
Abstract
This work aims at determining the impact of slow to moderate rotation on the regular patterns often present in solar-like oscillation spectra. We focus on the well-known asteroseismic diagnostic echelle diagrams, examining how rotation may modify the estimates of the large and small spacings, as well as the identification of modes. We illustrate the work with a real case: the solar-like star Bootis. The modeling takes into account rotation effects on the equilibrium models through an effective gravity and on the oscillation frequencies through both perturbative and non-perturbative calculations. We compare the results of both type of calculations in the context of the regular spacings (like the small spacings and the scaled small spacings) and echelle diagrams. We show that for echelle diagrams the perturbative approach remains valid for rotational velocities up to 40-50 km/s. We…
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