Internal rotation of the red-giant star KIC 4448777 by means of asteroseismic inversion
M .P. Di Mauro, R. Ventura, D. Cardini, D. Stello, J., Christensen-Dalsgaard, W. A. Dziembowski, L. Paterno', P. G. Beck, S., Bloemen, G.R. Davies, K. De Smedt, Y. Elsworth, R. A. Garcia, S. Hekker, B., Mosser, and A. Tkachenko

TL;DR
This study uses asteroseismic inversion techniques on Kepler data to map the internal rotation profile of the red giant star KIC 4448777, revealing a faster rotating core and a decreasing rotation rate outward.
Contribution
It introduces a combined method to extract rotational splittings from complex red-giant oscillation spectra and estimates the internal rotation profile with high spatial resolution.
Findings
Core rotates rigidly at about 748 nHz.
Rotation decreases from core to envelope.
Core rotates 8 to 17 times faster than the surface.
Abstract
In this paper we study the dynamics of the stellar interior of the early red-giant star KIC 4448777 by asteroseismic inversion of 14 splittings of the dipole mixed modes obtained from {\it Kepler} observations. In order to overcome the complexity of the oscillation pattern typical of red-giant stars, we present a procedure which involves a combination of different methods to extract the rotational splittings from the power spectrum. We find not only that the core rotates faster than the surface, confirming previous inversion results generated for other red giants (Deheuvels et al. 2012,2014), but we also estimate the variation of the angular velocity within the helium core with a spatial resolution of and verify the hypothesis of a sharp discontinuity in the inner stellar rotation (Deheuvels et al. 2014). The results show that the entire core rotates rigidly with an…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
