Planetary detection limits taking into account stellar noise. II. Effect of stellar spot groups on radial-velocities
X. Dumusque, N.C. Santos, S. Udry, C. Lovis, X. Bonfils

TL;DR
This study simulates stellar spot group activity to determine how stellar noise affects radial-velocity planet detection, proposing optimized observational strategies to improve detection limits, especially for Earth-like planets.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation of stellar spot group effects on radial velocities and evaluates observational strategies to mitigate noise, enhancing planet detection capabilities.
Findings
Optimal observational strategy: three measurements per night, 10 minutes each, every three days.
Detection of 2.5-3.5 Earth-mass planets in habitable zones around K1V dwarfs.
ESPRESSO can detect 1.3 Earth-mass planets with higher detection rates.
Abstract
The detection of small mass planets with the radial-velocity technique is now confronted with the interference of stellar noise. HARPS can now reach a precision below the meter-per-second, which corresponds to the amplitudes of different stellar perturbations, such as oscillation, granulation, and activity. Solar spot groups induced by activity produce a radial-velocity noise of a few meter-per-second. The aim of this paper is to simulate this activity and calculate detection limits according to different observational strategies. Based on Sun observations, we reproduce the evolution of spot groups on the surface of a rotating star. We then calculate the radial-velocity effect induced by these spot groups as a function of time. Taking into account oscillation, granulation, activity, and a HARPS instrumental error of 80 cm/s, we simulate the effect of different observational strategies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
