Surface convection and red giants radii measurements
L. Piau, P. Kervella, S. Dib, P. Hauschildt

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the characteristic length scales used in convection models need adjustment for red giants, using observational data and two convection theories, leading to improved stellar models that better match observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that reducing the solar convection length scale improves the modeling of red giant radii and temperatures, aligning models more closely with observations and seismic data.
Findings
Reduced solar convection length scale improves RGB models
Models match observed radii and temperatures better
Enhanced agreement with seismic constraints
Abstract
The phenomenological models of convection use characteristic length scales they do not determine but that are chosen to fit solar or stellar observations. We investigate if changes of these length scales are required between the Sun and low mass stars on the red giant branch (RGB). The question is addressed jointly in the frameworks of the mixing length theory and of the full spectrum of turbulence model. For both models, the convective length scale is assumed to be a fixed fraction of the local pressure scale height. We use constraints coming from the observed effective temperatures and linear radii independently. We rely on a sample of 38 nearby giants and subgiants for which surface temperatures and luminosities are known accurately and the radii are determined through interferometry to better than 10%. For the few cases where the stellar masses were determined by asteroseismological…
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