The effect of the centrifugal acceleration on period spacings of gravito-inertial modes in intermediate-mass stars
Jan Henneco, Timothy Van Reeth, Vincent Prat, St\'ephane Mathis, Joey, S. G. Mombarg, Conny Aerts

TL;DR
This paper extends the traditional approximation of rotation to include centrifugal acceleration effects in stellar models, showing that these effects are detectable in space-based photometry and influence g-mode period spacings.
Contribution
The study introduces a new framework incorporating centrifugal deformation into the traditional approximation, improving the accuracy of asteroseismic models for rotating stars.
Findings
Centrifugal acceleration narrows the equatorial trapping band of g modes.
It increases pulsation periods and period spacings within observational uncertainties.
The effect is formally detectable in Kepler and TESS data.
Abstract
The Kepler and TESS missions delivered high-precision, long-duration photometric time series for hundreds of main-sequence stars with gravito-inertial (g) pulsation modes. This high precision allows us to evaluate increasingly detailed theoretical stellar models. Recent theoretical work extended the traditional approximation of rotation (TAR), a framework to evaluate the effect of the Coriolis acceleration on g-modes, to include the effects of the centrifugal acceleration in the approximation of slightly deformed stars, which so far had mostly been neglected in asteroseismology. This extension of the TAR was conceived by rederiving the TAR in a centrifugally deformed, spheroidal coordinate system. We explore the effect of the centrifugal acceleration on g modes and assess its detectability in space-based photometry. We implement the new framework to calculate the centrifugal deformation…
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