Testing the Spectroscopic Extraction of Suppression of Convective Blueshift
M. Miklos, T. W. Milbourne, R. D. Haywood, D. F. Phillips, S. H. Saar,, N. Meunier, H. M. Cegla, X. Dumusque, N. Langellier, J. Maldonado, L., Malavolta, A. Mortier, S. Thompson, C. A. Watson, M. Cecconi, R. Cosentino,, A. Ghedina, C-H. Li, M. L\'opez-Morales, E. Molinari

TL;DR
This study tests a spectroscopic method to isolate the suppression of convective blueshift in solar RV data, revealing challenges in applying it to low-activity stars and highlighting the need for additional activity modeling for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
It evaluates the spectroscopic extraction method for convective blueshift suppression using solar data, identifying limitations in low-activity conditions and emphasizing the need for comprehensive activity modeling.
Findings
Unable to isolate convective blueshift suppression in solar minimum data
Additional activity sources and instrumental effects must be considered
Method may require adaptation for low-activity stars
Abstract
Efforts to detect low-mass exoplanets using stellar radial velocities (RVs) are currently limited by magnetic photospheric activity. Suppression of convective blueshift is the dominant magnetic contribution to RV variability in low-activity Sun-like stars. Due to convective plasma motions, the magnitude of RV contributions from the suppression of convective blueshift is related to the depth of formation of photospheric spectral lines of a given species used to compute the RV time series. Meunier et al. (2017), used this relation to demonstrate a method for spectroscopic extraction of the suppression of convective blueshift in order to isolate RV contributions, including planetary RVs, that contribute equally to the timeseries for each spectral line. Here, we extract disk-integrated solar RVs from observations over a 2.5 year time span made with the solar telescope integrated with the…
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