The detection of mixed oscillation modes offers a unique insight into the
internal structure of core helium burning (CHeB) stars. The stellar structure
during CHeB is very uncertain because the growth of the convective core, and/or
the development of a semiconvection zone, is critically dependent on the
treatment of convective boundaries. In this study we calculate a suite of
stellar structure models and their non-radial pulsations to investigate why the
predicted asymptotic g-mode ℓ=1 period spacing ΔΠ1 is
systematically lower than is inferred from Kepler field stars. We find that
only models with large convective cores, such as those calculated with our
newly proposed "maximal-overshoot" scheme, can match the average ΔΠ1
reported. However, we also find another possible solution that is related to
the method used to determine ΔΠ1: mode trapping can raise the
observationally inferred ΔΠ1 well above its true value. Even after
accounting for these two proposed resolutions to the discrepancy in average
ΔΠ1, models still predict more CHeB stars with low ΔΠ1 (<270 s) than are observed. We establish two possible remedies for this: i)
there may be a difficulty in determining ΔΠ1 for early CHeB stars
(when ΔΠ1 is lowest) because of the effect that the sharp composition
profile at the hydrogen burning shell has on the pulsations, or ii) the mass of
the helium core at the flash is higher than predicted. Our conclusions
highlight the need for the reporting of selection effects in asteroseismic
population studies in order to safely use this information to constrain stellar
evolution theory.Comment: 24 pages. 24 figures. Published in MNRA