Angular momentum relaxation in models of rotating early-type stars
Michel Rieutord (IRAP, France), Enzo Enzo Brossier-S\'echer (IRAP, ISAE, France), Joey Mombarg (IRAP, CEA, France)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the timescale for angular momentum relaxation in rotating early-type stars, emphasizing the importance of core-envelope interface layers and viscosity in their rotational evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of damping timescales of eigenmodes using improved polytropic models, highlighting the complex dynamics involved in stellar angular momentum redistribution.
Findings
Viscous modes have slow damping timescales, influencing stellar rotation.
Baroclinic modes are rapidly damped and less significant for relaxation.
Core-envelope interface layers play a crucial role in angular momentum transport.
Abstract
The rotational evolution of stars is still an open question of stellar physics because of the numerous phenomena that can contribute to the distribution of angular momentum. This paper aims at determining the time scale over which a rotating early-type star relaxes to a steady baroclinic state or, equivalently, in which case its nuclear evolution is slow enough to let the evolution of the star be modelled by a series of quasi-steady states. We investigate the damping time scale of baroclinic and viscous eigenmodes that are potentially excited by the continuous forcing of nuclear evolution. We first investigate this problem with a spherical Boussinesq model. Since much of the dynamics is concentrated in the radiative envelope of the star, we then improve the realism of the modelling by using a polytropic model of the envelope that takes into account a realistic density profile. The…
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