The treatment of mixing in core helium burning models - I. Implications for asteroseismology
Thomas Constantino, Simon W. Campbell, Joergen Christensen-Dalsgaard,, John C. Lattanzio, Dennis Stello

TL;DR
This paper investigates why models of core helium burning stars predict lower g-mode period spacings than observed, exploring convective boundary treatments, mode trapping effects, and potential discrepancies in core mass or measurement methods.
Contribution
It introduces a new maximal-overshoot scheme for modeling convective cores and analyzes mode trapping effects, providing insights into discrepancies between models and observations.
Findings
Models with large convective cores match observed period spacings.
Mode trapping can artificially increase inferred period spacings.
Discrepancies remain for low period spacing stars, suggesting measurement or core mass issues.
Abstract
The detection of mixed oscillation modes offers a unique insight into the internal structure of core helium burning (CHeB) stars. The stellar structure during CHeB is very uncertain because the growth of the convective core, and/or the development of a semiconvection zone, is critically dependent on the treatment of convective boundaries. In this study we calculate a suite of stellar structure models and their non-radial pulsations to investigate why the predicted asymptotic g-mode period spacing is systematically lower than is inferred from Kepler field stars. We find that only models with large convective cores, such as those calculated with our newly proposed "maximal-overshoot" scheme, can match the average reported. However, we also find another possible solution that is related to the method used to determine : mode trapping can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
