Impact of micro-telluric lines on precise radial velocities and its correction
D. Cunha, N. C. Santos, P. Figueira, A. Santerne, J. L. Bertaux, and, C. Lovis

TL;DR
This study investigates how micro-telluric lines affect precise radial velocity measurements and proposes correction methods, highlighting their significance for future high-precision instruments like ESPRESSO.
Contribution
It quantifies the impact of micro-telluric lines on radial velocities and evaluates correction techniques using synthetic atmospheric models and real spectra.
Findings
Micro-telluric lines can significantly impact radial velocity measurements.
The impact varies with stellar radial velocity, airmass, humidity, and Earth's barycentric velocity.
Correction methods using synthetic atmospheric spectra can mitigate these effects.
Abstract
Context: In the near future, new instruments such as ESPRESSO will arrive, allowing us to reach a precision in radial-velocity measurements on the order of 10 cm/s. At this level of precision, several noise sources that until now have been outweighed by photon noise will start to contribute significantly to the error budget. The telluric lines that are not neglected by the masks for the radial velocity computation, here called micro-telluric lines, are one such noise source. Aims: In this work we investigate the impact of micro-telluric lines in the radial velocities calculations. We also investigate how to correct the effect of these atmospheric lines on radial velocities. Methods: The work presented here follows two parallel lines. First, we calculated the impact of the micro-telluric lines by multiplying a synthetic solar-like stellar spectrum by synthetic atmospheric spectra and…
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