The traditional approximation of rotation for rapidly rotating stars and planets. II. Deformation and differential rotation
Hachem Dhouib, Vincent Prat, Timothy Van Reeth, St\'ephane Mathis

TL;DR
This paper extends the traditional approximation of rotation to include both differential rotation and centrifugal deformation, enabling better analysis of gravito-inertial waves in rapidly rotating stars and planets.
Contribution
It provides a new analytical formalism that generalizes the TAR to account for differential rotation and deformation simultaneously, improving asteroseismic diagnostics.
Findings
Differential rotation significantly affects GIWs in deformed stars.
The formalism can be used to detect differential rotation signatures with space photometry.
Effects are detectable with Kepler and TESS data.
Abstract
We examine the dynamics of low-frequency gravito-inertial waves (GIWs) in differentially rotating deformed radiation zones in stars and planets by generalising the traditional approximation of rotation (TAR). The TAR treatment was built on the assumptions that the star is spherical and uniformly rotating. However, it has been generalised in our previous work by including the effects of the centrifugal deformation using a non-perturbative approach in the uniformly rotating case. We aim to carry out a new generalisation of the TAR treatment to account for the differential rotation and the strong centrifugal deformation simultaneously. We generalise our previous work by taking into account the differential rotation in the derivation of our complete analytical formalism that allows the study of the dynamics of GIWs in differentially and rapidly rotating stars. We derived the complete set of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
