Radial-velocity jitter of stars as a function of observational timescale and stellar age
Stefan S. Brems, Martin K\"urster, Trifon Trifonov, Sabine, Reffert, Andreas Quirrenbach

TL;DR
This study empirically quantifies how stellar radial velocity jitter varies with stellar age and observational timescale, providing a predictive activity--age--lag relation to improve exoplanet detection accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a new empirical activity--age--lag relation for stellar RV jitter based on archival data, independent of stellar models.
Findings
RV jitter decreases with stellar age, from over 500 m/s at 5 Myr to 2.3 m/s at 5 Gyr.
The maximum RV jitter over decades is significantly higher than over daily timescales.
The pooled variance technique effectively identifies quasiperiodic signals in irregular data.
Abstract
Stars show various amounts of radial velocity (RV) jitter due to varying stellar activity levels. The typical amount of RV jitter as a function of stellar age and observational timescale has not yet been systematically quantified, although it is often larger than the instrumental precision of modern high-resolution spectrographs used for Doppler planet detection and characterization. We aim to empirically determine the intrinsic stellar RV variation for mostly G and K dwarf stars on different timescales and for different stellar ages independently of stellar models. We also focus on young stars ( 30 Myr), where the RV variation is known to be large. We use archival FEROS and HARPS RV data of stars which were observed at least 30 times spread over at least two years. We then apply the pooled variance (PV) technique to these data sets to identify the periods and amplitudes of…
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