Asteroseismology provides powerful means to probe stellar interiors. The
oscillations frequencies are closely related to stellar interior properties via
the density and sound speed profiles. Since these are tightly linked with the
mass and evolutionary state, we can expect to determine the age and mass of a
star from the comparison of its oscillation spectrum with predictions of
stellar models. Such a comparison suffers both from the problems we face when
modeling a particular star (as the uncertainties on global parameters and
chemical composition) and from our misunderstanding of processes at work in
stellar interiors (as the transport processes that may lead to core mixing and
affect the model ages). For stars where observations have provided precise and
numerous oscillation frequencies together with accurate global parameters and
additional information (as the radius or the mass if the star is in a binary
system, the interferometric radius or the mean density if the star is an
exoplanet host), we can also expect to better constrain the physical
description of the stellar structure and to get a more reliable age estimation.
After a survey of stellar pulsations, we present some seismic diagnostics that
can be used to infer the age of a star as well as their limitations. We then
illustrate the ability of asteroseismology to scrutinize stellar interiors on
the basis of a few exemples. In the years to come, extended very precise
asteroseismic observations are expected, in photometry or in spectroscopy, from
ground-based (HARPS, CORALIE, ELODIE, UVES, UCLES, SIAMOIS, SONG) or spatial
devices (MOST, CoRoT, WIRE, Kepler, PLATO). This will considerably enlarge the
sample of stars eligible to asteroseismic age determination and should allow to
estimate the age of individual stars with a 10-20% accuracy.Comment: 10 pages, 15 figures, Proc. of the IAU Symp. 258 "The Ages of Stars",
Baltimore USA 13-17 Oct 2008, eds D. Soderblom et al., CUP in pres