Detecting Planets Around Very Low Mass Stars with the Radial Velocity Method
A. Reiners, J.L. Bean, K.F. Huber, S. Dreizler, A. Seifahrt, S. Czesla

TL;DR
This study evaluates the potential of near-infrared radial velocity measurements for detecting planets around very low-mass stars, comparing their precision to optical methods and analyzing activity-induced jitter effects.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of optical and near-infrared radial velocity precision for low-mass stars and assesses calibration strategies and activity impacts.
Findings
nIR can match optical precision around M4 stars
nIR gains in precision for cooler stars
Spot activity affects RV measurements across wavelengths
Abstract
The detection of planets around very low-mass stars with the radial velocity method is hampered by the fact that these stars are very faint at optical wavelengths where the most high-precision spectrometers operate. We investigate the precision that can be achieved in radial velocity measurements of low mass stars in the near infrared (nIR) Y-, J-, and H-bands, and we compare it to the precision achievable in the optical. For early-M stars, radial velocity measurements in the nIR offer no or only marginal advantage in comparison to optical measurements. Although they emit more flux in the nIR, the richness of spectral features in the optical outweighs the flux difference. We find that nIR measurement can be as precise than optical measurements in stars of spectral type ~M4, and from there the nIR gains in precision towards cooler objects. We studied potential calibration strategies in…
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