The traditional approximation of rotation for rapidly rotating stars and planets. I. The impact of strong deformation
Hachem Dhouib, Vincent Prat, Timothy Van Reeth, St\'ephane Mathis

TL;DR
This paper extends the Traditional Approximation of Rotation to account for centrifugal deformation in rapidly rotating stars, providing a formalism to study gravito-inertial waves in deformed stellar models and assessing its validity.
Contribution
It develops a generalized TAR formalism for deformed stars, incorporating centrifugal effects, and evaluates its applicability using 2D stellar models.
Findings
Centrifugal effects influence gravito-inertial waves in rapidly rotating stars.
The generalized TAR is valid within specific rotation rate domains.
Centrifugal effects are detectable in space photometry data.
Abstract
The Traditional Approximation of Rotation (TAR) is a treatment of the hydrodynamic equations of rotating and stably stratified fluids in which the action of the Coriolis acceleration along the direction of the entropy and chemical stratifications is neglected because it is weak in comparison with the buoyancy force. The dependent variables in the equations for the dynamics of gravito-inertial waves (GIWs) then become separable into radial and horizontal parts as in the non-rotating case. The TAR is built on the assumptions that the star is spherical (i.e. its centrifugal deformation is neglected) and uniformly rotating. We study the feasibility of carrying out a generalisation of the TAR to account for the centrifugal acceleration in the case of strongly deformed uniformly and rapidly rotating stars (and planets), and to identify the validity domain of this approximation. We built…
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