Persistent starspot signals on M dwarfs: multi-wavelength Doppler observations with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder and Keck/HIRES
Paul Robertson, Gudmundur Stefansson, Suvrath Mahadevan, Michael Endl,, William D. Cochran, Corey Beard, Chad F. Bender, Scott A. Diddams, Nicholas, Duong, Eric B. Ford, Connor Fredrick, Samuel Halverson, Fred Hearty, Rae, Holcomb, Lydia Juan, Shubham Kanodia, Jack Lubin

TL;DR
This study investigates the persistent and chromatic nature of starspot-induced Doppler signals in rapidly-rotating M dwarfs using multi-wavelength observations, highlighting challenges in distinguishing these signals from exoplanets.
Contribution
It provides the first multi-wavelength RV analysis of M dwarfs showing long-lived starspot signals, emphasizing their coherence and chromaticity, which complicate exoplanet detection.
Findings
Starspot signals remain coherent for hundreds of rotations.
NIR amplitudes are generally lower than optical.
Optical and NIR signals can be phase- and amplitude-consistent.
Abstract
Young, rapidly-rotating M dwarfs exhibit prominent starspots, which create quasiperiodic signals in their photometric and Doppler spectroscopic measurements. The periodic Doppler signals can mimic radial velocity (RV) changes expected from orbiting exoplanets. Exoplanets can be distinguished from activity-induced false positives by the chromaticity and long-term incoherence of starspot signals, but these qualities are poorly constrained for fully-convective M stars. Coherent photometric starspot signals on M dwarfs may persist for hundreds of rotations, and the wavelength dependence of starspot RV signals may not be consistent between stars due to differences in their magnetic fields and active regions. We obtained precise multi-wavelength RVs of four rapidly-rotating M dwarfs (AD Leo, G 227-22, GJ 1245B, GJ 3959) using the near-infrared (NIR) Habitable-zone Planet Finder, and the…
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