Seismic evidence for a weak radial differential rotation in intermediate-mass core helium burning stars
S. Deheuvels, J. Ballot, P.G. Beck, B. Mosser, R. {\O}stensen, R.A., Garc\'ia, M.J. Goupil

TL;DR
This study uses Kepler data to measure internal rotation profiles of intermediate-mass core helium burning stars, revealing weak radial differential rotation and providing constraints on angular momentum transport mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate radial differential rotation in secondary clump stars using mixed mode splittings and inversion techniques, highlighting weak differential rotation.
Findings
Most stars show weak radial differential rotation with core rotating faster than envelope.
One star exhibits near solid-body rotation, indicating efficient angular momentum redistribution.
Results constrain models of angular momentum transport during post-main sequence evolution.
Abstract
The detection of mixed modes that are split by rotation in Kepler red giants has made it possible to probe the internal rotation profiles of these stars, which brings new constraints on the transport of angular momentum in stars. Mosser et al. (2012) have measured the rotation rates in the central regions of intermediate-mass core helium burning stars (secondary clump stars). Our aim was to exploit& the rotational splittings of mixed modes to estimate the amount of radial differential rotation in the interior of secondary clump stars using Kepler data, in order to place constraints on angular momentum transport in intermediate-mass stars. We selected a subsample of Kepler secondary clump stars with mixed modes that are clearly rotationally split. By applying a thorough statistical analysis, we showed that the splittings of both gravity-dominated modes (trapped in central regions) and…
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