The test case of HD26965: difficulties disentangling weak Doppler signals from stellar activity
Mat\'ias R. D\'iaz, James S. Jenkins, Mikko Tuomi, R. Paul Butler,, Maritza G. Soto, Johanna K. Teske, Fabo Feng, Stephen A. Shectman, Pamela, Arriagada, Jeffrey D. Crane, Ian B. Thompson, Steven S. Vogt

TL;DR
This paper investigates the challenge of distinguishing a potential super-Earth planet signal from stellar activity noise in radial velocity data of HD26965, emphasizing the difficulty when planetary periods are close to stellar rotation periods.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the radial velocity signals of HD26965, highlighting the complexities in separating planetary signals from stellar activity, and discusses the limitations of current modeling approaches.
Findings
The 42-day signal could be planetary or stellar activity.
Moderate correlations between activity indicators and RV data were found.
Stellar rotation effects are difficult to fully model and remove.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a radial velocity signal that can be interpreted as a planetary-mass candidate orbiting the K dwarf HD26965, with an orbital period of 42.3640.015 days, or alternatively, as the presence of residual, uncorrected rotational activity in the data. Observations include data from HIRES, PFS, CHIRON, and HARPS, where 1,111 measurements were made over 16 years. Our best solution for HD26965 is consistent with a super-Earth that has a minimum mass of 6.920.79 M orbiting at a distance of 0.2150.008 AU from its host star. We have analyzed the correlation between spectral activity indicators and the radial velocities from each instrument, showing moderate correlations that we include in our model. From this analysis, we recover a 38 day signal, which matches some literature values of the stellar rotation period. However, from…
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