ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The mixing length theory (MLT) used to compute the temperature gradient in superadiabatic layers of stellar (interior and atmosphere) models contains in its standard form 4 free parameters. Three parameters are fixed a priori (and define what we denote as the MLT flavour) whereas one (the so-called mixing length) is calibrated by reproducing observational constraints. The classical Bohm-Vitense flavour is used in all modern MLT-based stellar model computations and, despite its crude approximations, the resulting $T_{eff}$ scale appears -- perhaps surprisingly -- remarkably realistic, once the mixing length parameter is calibrated with a solar model. Model atmosphere computations employ parameter choices different from what is used in stellar interior modelling, raising the question of whether a single MLT flavour and mixing length value can be used to compute interiors and atmospheres of stars of all types. As a first step towards addressing this issue, we study whether the MLT flavour (the so-called ML2) and mixing length choice that have been proven adequate to model white dwarf atmospheres, is able to provide, when used in stellar models, results at least comparable to the use of the classical Bohm-Vitense flavour. We have computed solar models and evolutionary tracks for both low- and intermediate-mass Population I and II stars, adopting both solar calibrated Bohm-Vitense and ML2 flavours of the MLT in our stellar evolution code, and state-of-the-art input physics. The two sets of models provide consistent results, with only minor differences. Both calibrations reproduce also the $T_{eff}$ of red giants in a sample of Galactic globular clusters.
We present here the first stellar models on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD), in which convection is treated according to the novel scale-free convection theory (SFC theory) by Pasetto et al. (2014). The aim is to compare the results of the new
Stellar convection is customarily described by Mixing-Length Theory, which makes use of the mixing-length scale to express the convective flux, velocity, and temperature gradients of the convective elements and stellar medium. The mixing-length scale
The fundamental properties of detached eclipsing binary stars can be measured very accurately, which could make them important objects for constraining the treatment of convection in theoretical stellar models. However, only four or five pieces of in
(abridged) The calculation of the thermal stratification in the superadiabatic layers of stellar models with convective envelopes is a long standing problem of stellar astrophysics, and has a major impact on predicted observational properties like ra
Convection is the mechanism by which energy is transported through the outermost 30% of the Sun. Solar turbulent convection is notoriously difficult to model across the entire convection zone where the density spans many orders of magnitude. In this