Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 925, Issue 2, Pages -Publisher
IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac3dfb
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Funding
- European Research Council (ERC) under the European Unions Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [670519]
- KU Leuven Research Council [C16/18/005: PARADISE]
- Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO) [V429020N, 12ZB620N, 11F7120N]
- Flemish Government department EWI
- French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)
- ESRR [ANR-16-CE31-000701]
- CALMIP [2020-P0107]
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Recent study presented new MESA stellar models with improvements in computing efficiency and shear mixing in radiative envelopes, which allows for mode trapping in chemical mixing profiles. Predictions also show correlations between N/C and C/O abundance ratios with stellar age, observable with precision around 0.1 dex with accurate age estimates.
The treatment of chemical mixing in the radiative envelopes of intermediate-mass stars has hardly been calibrated so far. Recent asteroseismic studies demonstrated that a constant diffusion coefficient in the radiative envelope is not able to explain the periods of trapped gravity modes in the oscillation spectra of gamma Doradus pulsators. We present a new generation of MESA stellar models with two major improvements. First, we present a new implementation for computing radiative accelerations and Rosseland mean opacities that requires significantly less CPU time. Second, the inclusion of shear mixing based on rotation profiles computed with the 2D stellar structure code ESTER is considered. We show predictions for the mode periods of these models covering stellar masses from 1.4 to 3.0 M (circle dot) across the main sequence, computed for different metallicities. The morphology of the chemical mixing profile resulting from shear mixing in combination with atomic diffusion and radiative levitation does allow for mode trapping, while the diffusion coefficient in the outer envelope is large (>10(6) cm(2) s(-1)). Furthermore, we make predictions for the evolution of surface abundances for which radiative accelerations can be computed. We find that the N/C and C/O abundance ratios correlate with stellar age. We predict that these correlations are observable with precisions less than or similar to 0.1 dex on these ratios, given that a precise age estimate can be made.
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