Distributions and evolution of the equatorial rotation velocities of 2937 BAF-type main-sequence stars from asteroseismology
Conny Aerts

TL;DR
This study uses asteroseismology to accurately measure the rotation velocities and angular momentum of nearly 3000 BAF-type main-sequence stars, revealing evolutionary trends and distribution structures.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale, model-independent asteroseismic measurements of equatorial rotation velocities and angular momentum for a broad mass range of main-sequence stars.
Findings
Unimodal Veq and Veq/Vcrit distributions for stars with 1.3-2.5 M_sun.
Detection of a break in specific angular momentum around 2.3-2.7 M_sun.
Near-core rotation slows down with stellar evolution.
Abstract
Studies of the rotational velocities of intermediate-mass main-sequence stars are crucial for testing stellar evolution theory. They often rely on spectroscopic measurements of the projected rotation velocities. These not only suffer from the unknown projection factor but tend to ignore additional line-profile broadening mechanisms aside from rotation, such as pulsations and turbulent motions near the stellar surface. This limits the accuracy of Veq distributions. We use asteroseismic measurements to investigate the distribution of the equatorial rotation velocity, its ratio with respect to the critical rotation velocity, and the specific angular momentum for several thousands of BAF-type stars, covering a mass range from 1.3M to 8.8M and almost the entire core-hydrogen burning phase. We rely on high-precision model-independent internal rotation frequencies, as well as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
