Exoplanet transits enable high-resolution spectroscopy across spatially resolved stellar surfaces
Dainis Dravins, Hans-G\"unter Ludwig, Erik Dahl\'en, Hiva Pazira

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a method to obtain high-resolution, spatially resolved spectra of stellar surfaces using exoplanet transits, enabling detailed testing of stellar atmosphere models.
Contribution
It introduces a technique to reconstruct stellar surface spectra at high resolution during transits, providing a new tool for stellar atmosphere analysis.
Findings
Successfully reconstructed FeI line profiles across the stellar surface.
Demonstrated the method on the star HD209458 at R=80,000.
Paved the way for applying this technique to other stars with upcoming telescopes.
Abstract
Observations of stellar surfaces - except for the Sun - are hampered by their tiny angular extent, while observed spectral lines are smeared by averaging over the stellar surface, and by stellar rotation. Exoplanet transits can be used to analyze stellar atmospheric structure, yielding high-resolution spectra across spatially highly resolved stellar surfaces, free from effects of spatial smearing and the rotational wavelength broadening present in full-disk spectra. During a transit, stellar surface portions successively become hidden, and differential spectroscopy between various transit phases provides spectra of those surface segments then hidden behind the planet. The small area subtended by even a large planet (about 1% of a main-sequence star) offers high spatial resolution but demands very precise observations. We demonstrate the reconstruction of photospheric FeI line profiles…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
