Dipole modes with depressed amplitudes in red giants are mixed modes
B. Mosser, K. Belkacem, C. Pincon, M. Takata, M. Vrard, C. Barban,, M-J. Goupil, T. Kallinger, R. Samadi

TL;DR
This study shows that depressed dipole modes in red giants are mixed modes with specific damping properties, challenging magnetic suppression hypotheses and providing new constraints on stellar core physics.
Contribution
It characterizes the seismic properties of depressed modes, demonstrating their mixed nature and constraining the physical mechanisms responsible for mode damping in red giants.
Findings
Depressed dipole modes are mixed modes, not pure pressure modes.
The seismic properties of stars with depressed modes are similar to normal stars, except for visibility.
Magnetic suppression hypotheses are inconsistent with observed properties.
Abstract
Seismic observations have shown that a number of evolved stars exhibit low-amplitude dipole modes, which are referred to as depressed modes. Recently, these low amplitudes have been attributed to the presence of a strong magnetic field in the stellar core of those stars. We intend to study the properties of depressed modes in evolved stars, which is a necessary condition before concluding on the physical nature of the mechanism responsible for the reduction of the dipole mode amplitudes. We perform a thorough characterization of the global seismic parameters of depressed dipole modes and show that these modes have a mixed character. The observation of stars showing dipole mixed modes that are depressed is especially useful for deriving model-independent conclusions on the dipole mode damping. Observations prove that depressed dipole modes in red giants are not pure pressure modes…
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