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The CoRoT and Kepler missions provided a wealth of high-quality data for solar-like oscillations. To make the best of such data for seismic inferences, we need theoretical models with precise near-surface structure, which has significant influence on solar-like oscillation frequencies. The mixing-length parameter, $alpha$, is a key factor for the near-surface structure. In the convection formulations used in evolution codes, the $alpha$ is a free parameter that needs to be properly specified. We calibrated $alpha$ values by matching entropy profiles of 1D envelope models with those of 3D CO$^5$BOLD models. For such calibration, previous works concentrated on the classical mixing-length theory (MLT). Here we also analyzed the full spectrum turbulence (FST) models. For the atmosphere part in the 1D models, we use the Eddington grey $T(tau)$ relation and the one with the solar-calibrated Hopf-like function. For both the MLT and FST models with a mixing length $l=alpha H_p$, calibrated $alpha$ values increase with increasing $g$ or decreasing $T_{rm eff}$. For the FST models, we also calibrated values of $alpha^*$ defined as $l=r_{rm top}-r+alpha^*H_{p,{rm top}}$. $alpha^*$ is found to increase with $T_{rm eff}$ and $g$. As for the correspondence to the 3D models, the solar Hopf-like function gives a photospheric-minimum entropy closer to a 3D model than the Eddington $T(tau)$. The structure below the photosphere depends on the convection model. However, not a single convection model gives the best correspondence since the averaged 3D quantities are not necessarily related via an EOS. Although the FST models with $l=r_{rm top}-r+alpha^*H_{p,{rm top}}$ are found to give the frequencies closest to the solar observed ones, a more appropriate treatment of the top part of the 1D convective envelope is necessary.
We present evolutionary models for solar-like stars with an improved treatment of convection that results in a more accurate estimate of the radius and effective temperature. This is achieved by improving the calibration of the mixing-length paramete
Red giants in the updated APOGEE-Kepler catalogue, with estimates of mass, chemical composition, surface gravity and effective temperature, have recently challenged stellar models computed under the standard assumption of solar calibrated mixing leng
The granulation background seen in the power spectrum of a solar-like oscillator poses a serious challenge for extracting precise and detailed information about the stellar oscillations. Using a 3D hydrodynamical simulation of the Sun computed with C
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 bright, nearby binary $alpha$ Centauri provides an excellent laboratory for testing stellar evolution models, as it is one of the few stellar systems for which we have high-precision classical (mass, radius, luminosity) and asteroseismic ($p$-mod