Calibrating angular momentum transport in intermediate-mass stars from gravity-mode asteroseismology
Joey S. G. Mombarg

TL;DR
This study uses gravity-mode asteroseismology of F-type dwarfs to calibrate and test models of angular momentum transport in stars, finding that diffusive processes can generally explain observed rotation profiles but with some discrepancies.
Contribution
It provides observational calibration of angular momentum transport efficiency and tests state-of-the-art models against observed stellar rotation profiles.
Findings
Diffusive models with specific viscosities explain most observed rotation profiles.
Initial rotation rates are below 10% of critical at ZAMS.
Rotationally-induced mechanisms sometimes overpredict core-to-surface rotation ratios.
Abstract
The physical mechanisms driving the transport of angular momentum in stars are not fully understood, as current models cannot explain the observed stellar rotation profiles across all stages of evolution. By making use of pulsating F-type dwarfs, this work aims at (i) observationally calibrating the efficiency of angular momentum transport, assuming a constant uniform viscosity, and (ii) testing how well state-of-the-art rotating stellar models with angular momentum (AM) transport by rotationally-induced processes can explain observed rotation profiles. In both cases, the aim is to simultaneously reproduce the measured near-core rotation and core-to-surface rotation ratio. Asteroseismic modelling is applied to a sample of seven slowly rotating pulsators, to derive (core) masses and ages from their gravity-mode oscillations. This work focuses on the main sequence, using models that start…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
