Measuring the extent of convective cores in low-mass stars using Kepler data: towards a calibration of core overshooting
S. Deheuvels, I. Brand\~ao, V. Silva Aguirre, J. Ballot, E. Michel, M., S. Cunha, Y. Lebreton, and T. Appourchaux

TL;DR
This study uses asteroseismology and Kepler data to measure and calibrate the extent of convective cores in low-mass stars, aiming to reduce uncertainties in stellar age estimates.
Contribution
It introduces a seismic diagnostic using $r_{010}$ ratios to measure convective core sizes and calibrates extra-mixing parameters across different stellar evolution codes.
Findings
Convective cores detected in 8 out of 24 stars.
Seismic measurements agree between CESAM2k and MESA codes.
Calibration of extra-mixing beyond the core proposed.
Abstract
Our poor understanding of the boundaries of convective cores generates large uncertainties on the extent of these cores and thus on stellar ages. Our aim is to use asteroseismology to consistently measure the extent of convective cores in a sample of main-sequence stars whose masses lie around the mass-limit for having a convective core. We first test and validate a seismic diagnostic that was proposed to probe in a model-dependent way the extent of convective cores using the so-called ratios, which are built with and modes. We apply this procedure to 24 low-mass stars chosen among Kepler targets to optimize the efficiency of this diagnostic. For this purpose, we compute grids of stellar models with both the CESAM2k and MESA evolution codes, where the extensions of convective cores are modeled either by an instantaneous mixing or as a diffusion process. Among the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Space Exploration and Technology
