Reinvestigating $\alpha$ Cen AB in light of asteroseismic forward and inverse methods
S\'ebastien Salmon, Val\'erie Van Grootel, Ga\"el Buldgen,, Marc-Antoine Dupret, Patrick Eggenberger

TL;DR
This study uses updated stellar models and asteroseismic inverse methods to investigate the α Cen AB system, aiming to confirm the presence of a convective core in α Cen A, but observational data quality limits definitive conclusions.
Contribution
It introduces new asteroseismic calibrations with updated chemical compositions and applies inverse methods to assess core presence in α Cen A.
Findings
Updated models suggest lower stellar masses.
No conclusive evidence for a convective core in α Cen A.
Improved observational data is needed for definitive results.
Abstract
The Cen stellar system is the closest neighbour to our Sun. Its main component is a binary composed of two main-sequence stars, one more massive than the Sun and one less massive. The system's bright magnitude led to a wealth of astronomical observations over a long period, making it an appealing testbed for stellar physics. In particular, detection of stellar pulsations in both Cen A and B has revealed the potential of asteroseismology for determining its fundamental stellar parameters. Asteroseismic studies have also focused on the presence of a convective core in the A component, but as yet without definitive confirmation. Progress in the determination of solar surface abundances and stellar opacities have yielded new input for stellar theoretical models. We investigate their impact on a reference system such as Cen AB. We seek to confirm the presence of a…
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