Angular momentum redistribution by mixed modes in evolved low-mass stars. I. Theoretical formalism
K. Belkacem, J.P. Marques, M.J. Goupil, T. Sonoi, R.M. Ouazzani, M.A., Dupret, S. Mathis, B. Mosser, M. Grosjean

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical formalism using the Transformed Eulerian Mean approach to investigate how mixed modes can extract angular momentum from the cores of evolved low-mass stars, addressing the discrepancy between observations and stellar models.
Contribution
It introduces a new formalism combining wave momentum and heat flux effects to quantify angular momentum transport by mixed modes in stellar interiors.
Findings
Mixed modes can extract angular momentum from stellar cores.
Wave heat flux significantly influences angular momentum redistribution.
The formalism is applied to a 1.3 solar mass star model, relevant to Kepler and CoRoT observations.
Abstract
Seismic observations by the space-borne mission \emph{Kepler} have shown that the core of red giant stars slows down while evolving, requiring an efficient physical mechanism to extract angular momentum from the inner layers. Current stellar evolution codes fail to reproduce the observed rotation rates by several orders of magnitude, and predict a drastic spin-up of red giant cores instead. New efficient mechanisms of angular momentum transport are thus required. In this framework, our aim is to investigate the possibility that mixed modes extract angular momentum from the inner radiative regions of evolved low-mass stars. To this end, we consider the Transformed Eulerian Mean (TEM) formalism, introduced by Andrews \& McIntyre (1978), that allows us to consider the combined effect of both the wave momentum flux in the mean angular momentum equation and the wave heat flux in the mean…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
