ROPS: A New Search for Habitable Earths in the Southern Sky
J. R. Barnes, J. S. Jenkins, H. R. A. Jones, P. Rojo, P. Arriagada, A., Jordan, D. Minniti, M. Tuomi, S. V. Jeffers, and D. Pinfield

TL;DR
The paper introduces ROPS, a novel spectroscopic survey targeting late-type M dwarfs to detect low-mass, potentially habitable planets using a hybrid radial velocity method with high precision.
Contribution
ROPS employs a new hybrid radial velocity technique and demonstrates its effectiveness in detecting Earth-sized planets around late M dwarfs in the habitable zone.
Findings
Achieved 10 m/s precision for M5.5V stars
Detected signals consistent with Neptune-mass planets
Estimated potential to find <10 M_Earth habitable zone planets
Abstract
We present the first results from our Red Optical Planet Survey (ROPS) to search for low mass planets orbiting late type dwarfs (M5.5V - M9V) in their habitable zones (HZ). Our observations, with the red arm of the MIKE spectrograph (0.5 - 0.9 microns) at the 6.5 m Magellan Clay telescope at Las Campanas Observatory indicate that >= 92 per cent of the flux lies beyond 0.7 microns. We use a novel approach that is essentially a hybrid of the simultaneous iodine and ThAr methods for determining precision radial velocities. We apply least squares deconvolution to obtain a single high S/N ratio stellar line for each spectrum and cross correlate against the simultaneously observed telluric line profile, which we derive in the same way. Utilising the 0.62 - 0.90 micron region, we have achieved an r.m.s. precision of 10 m/s for an M5.5V spectral type star with spectral S/N ~160 on 5 minute…
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