Abstract
Context. Asteroseismic measurements of the internal rotation rate in evolved stars pointed to a lack of angular momentum (AM) transport in stellar evolution models. Several physical processes in addition to hydrodynamical ones were proposed as candidates for the missing mechanism. Nonetheless, no current candidate can satisfy all the constraints provided by asteroseismology.
Aims. We revisit the role of a candidate process whose efficiency scales with the contrast between the rotation rate of the core and the surface. This process was proposed in previous works to be related to the azimuthal magneto-rotational instability.
Methods. We computed stellar evolution models of low- and intermediate-mass stars with the parametric formulation of AM transport proposed in previous works for this instability until the end of the core-helium burning for low- and intermediate-mass stars, and compare our results to the latest asteroseismic constraints available in the post-main sequence phase.
Results. Both hydrogen-shell-burning stars in the red-giant branch and core-helium-burning stars of low- and intermediate-mass in the mass range 1 M⊙ ≲ M ≲ 2.5 M⊙ can be simultaneously reproduced by this kind of parametrisation.
Conclusions. Given the current constraints from asteroseismology, the core rotation rate of post-main sequence stars seems to be well explained by a process whose efficiency is regulated by the internal degree of differential rotation in radiative zones.
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
5 articles.
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