An Investigation into the Radial Velocity Variations of CoRoT-7
A.P. Hatzes, R. Dvorak, G. Wuchterl, P. Guterman, M. Hartmann, M., Fridlund, D. Gandolfi, E. Guenther, and M. Paetzold

TL;DR
This study analyzes radial velocity data of CoRoT-7 to confirm the presence of multiple planets, including CoRoT-7b, and assesses stellar activity effects to accurately determine planetary masses and system stability.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis of spectral data to confirm multiple planets around CoRoT-7 and introduces methods to distinguish planetary signals from stellar activity.
Findings
Confirmed CoRoT-7b's RV signal with a mass of 6.9 +/- 1.4 M_Earth.
Detected a potential additional companion with a 9-day period.
Established the system's long-term dynamical stability.
Abstract
CoRoT-7b, the first transiting ``superearth'' exoplanet, has a radius of 1.7 R_Earth and a mass of 4.8 M_Earth. Ground-based radial velocity measurements also detected an additional companion with a period of 3.7 days (CoRoT-7c) and a mass of 8.4 M_Earth. The mass of CoRoT-7b is a crucial parameter for planet structure models, but is difficult to determine because CoRoT-7 is a modestly active star and there is at least one additional companion. A Fourier analysis was performed on spectral data for CoRoT-7 taken with the HARPS spectrograph. These data include RV measurements, spectral line bisectors, the full width at half maximum of the cross-correlation function, and Ca II emission. The latter 3 quantities vary due to stellar activity and were used to assess the nature of the observed RV variations. An analysis of a sub-set of the RV measurements where multiple observations were made…
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