Asteroseismology of evolved stars to constrain the internal transport of angular momentum. V. Efficiency of the transport on the red giant branch and in the red clump
F.D. Moyano, P. Eggenberger, G. Meynet, C. Gehan, B. Mosser, G., Buldgen, S.J.A.J. Salmon

TL;DR
This study uses asteroseismology to measure core rotation rates in evolved stars, constraining the efficiency of internal angular momentum transport processes during different stellar phases and across various masses.
Contribution
It quantifies the efficiency of angular momentum transport in red giants, revealing its variation with stellar mass and evolutionary stage, and constrains the physical processes involved.
Findings
Transport efficiency increases with stellar mass during the hydrogen shell-burning phase.
Additional viscosity varies by two orders of magnitude across the mass range 1-2.5 M_sun.
Transport efficiency is higher in red-clump stars than in younger red giants.
Abstract
Thanks to asteroseismology, constraints on the core rotation rate are available for hundreds of low- and intermediate-mass stars in evolved phases. Current physical processes tested in stellar evolution models cannot reproduce the evolution of these core rotation rates. We investigate the efficiency of the internal angular momentum redistribution in red giants during the hydrogen shell and core-helium burning phases based on the asteroseismic determinations of their core rotation rates. We compute stellar evolution models with rotation and model the transport of angular momentum by the action of a sole dominant diffusive process parametrized by an additional viscosity. We constrain the values of this viscosity to match the mean core rotation rates of red giants and their behaviour with mass and evolution along the red giant branch and in the red clump. For red giants in the hydrogen…
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