Lithium depletion and angular momentum transport in solar-type stars
T. Dumont, A. Palacios, C. Charbonnel, O. Richard, L. Amard, K., Augustson, S. Mathis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how additional transport processes, including penetrative convection and turbulent mixing, can improve models of solar-type stars by simultaneously matching lithium depletion and internal rotation profiles observed in the Sun and open clusters.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent approach to modeling angular momentum and chemical transport, incorporating penetrative convection, vertical viscosity, and turbulent mixing, aligning models with multiple observational constraints.
Findings
Penetrative convection influences lithium depletion and correlates with initial rotation.
Adding vertical viscosity enhances angular momentum transport between core and envelope.
Turbulent mixing below the convective envelope is necessary to reproduce lithium depletion.
Abstract
Transport processes occurring in the radiative interior of solar-type stars are evidenced by the surface variation of light elements, in particular Li, and the evolution of their rotation rates. For the Sun, inversions of helioseismic data indicate that the radial profile of angular velocity in its radiative zone is nearly uniform, which implies the existence of angular momentum transport mechanisms. While there are many independent transport models for angular momentum and chemical species, there is a lack of self-consistent theories that permit stellar evolution models to simultaneously match the present-day observations of solar lithium abundances and radial rotation profiles. We explore how additional transport processes can improve the agreement between evolutionary models of rotating stars and observations. We constrain the resulting models by simultaneously using the evolution of…
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