DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200912284
Mode excitation by turbulent convection in rotating stars
I. Effect of uniform rotation
K. Belkacem1, 2, S. Mathis3, M. J. Goupil2, and R. Samadi21 Institut d'Astrophysique et Géophysique, Université de Liège, Allée du 6 Août 17, 4000 Liège, Belgium
e-mail: kevin.belkacem@obspm.fr
2 Observatoire de Paris, LESIA, CNRS UMR 8109, 92195 Meudon, France
3 CEA/DSM/IRFU/Service d'Astrophysique, CE Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Received 6 April 2009 / Accepted 9 September 2009
Abstract
We focus on the influence of the Coriolis acceleration
on the stochastic excitation of oscillation modes in convective regions of rotating stars.
Our aim is to estimate the asymmetry between excitation rates of prograde and retrograde modes.
We extend the formalism
derived for obtaining stellar p- and g-mode amplitudes (Samadi & Goupil 2001, A&A, 370, 136; Belkacem et al. 2008, A&A, 478, 163)
to include the effect of the Coriolis acceleration.
We then study the special case of uniform rotation
for slowly rotating stars by performing a perturbative analysis.
This allows us to consider the cases of the Sun and the CoRoT target HD 49933.
We find that, in the subsonic regime,
the influence of rotation as a direct contribution to mode driving
is negligible compared to the Reynolds stress contribution.
In slow rotators, the indirect effect of the modification of
the eigenfunctions on mode excitation is investigated by performing
a perturbative analysis of the excitation rates.
The excitation of solar p modes is found to be affected by rotation
with excitation-rate asymmetries between prograde and retrograde modes of the order of several percent.
Solar low-order g modes are also affected by uniform rotation and
their excitation-rate asymmetries are found to reach 10%.
The CoRoT target HD 49933 is rotating more rapidly than the Sun (
),
and we show that the resulting excitation-rate asymmetry is about 10% for the excitation rates of p modes.
We demonstrate that p and g mode excitation rates
are modified by uniform rotation through the Coriolis acceleration.
A study of the effect of differential rotation will be presented in a forthcoming paper.
Key words: convection -- turbulence -- stars: oscillations
© ESO 2009
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