Aula
Stars originate by the gravitational collapse of a turbulent molecular cloud of a diffuse medium, and
 are often observed to form clusters. Stellar clusters therefore play an important role in our
 understanding of star formation and of the dynamical processes at play. However, investigating the
 cluster formation is difficult because the density of the molecular cloud undergoes a change of
 many orders of magnitude. Hierarchical-step approaches to decompose the problem into different
 stages are therefore required, as well as reliable assumptions on the initial conditions in the clouds.
 In this talk I will report for the first time the use of the full potential of NASA Kepler
 asteroseismic observations coupled with 3D numerical simulations, to put strong constraints on the
 early formation stages of old open clusters. Thanks to a Bayesian peak bagging analysis of about 50
 red giant members of NGC 6791 and NGC 6819, the two most populated open clusters observed
 in the nominal Kepler mission, I derive a complete set of detailed oscillation mode properties for
 each star, with thousands of oscillation modes characterized. I therefore show how these
 asteroseismic properties lead to a discovery about the rotation history of stellar clusters. Finally,
 the observational findings will be compared with hydrodynamical simulations for stellar cluster
 formation to constrain the physical processes of turbulence, rotation, and magnetic fields that are
 in action during the collapse of the progenitor cloud into a proto-cluster.