The correlation between photometric variability and radial velocity jitter, based on TESS and HARPS observations
S. Hojjatpanah, M. Oshagh, P. Figueira, N.C. Santos, E. M., Amazo-G\'omez, S. G. Sousa, V. Adibekyan, B. Akinsanmi, O. Demangeon, J., Faria, J. Gomes da Silva, N. Meunier

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between photometric variability and radial velocity jitter in stars, revealing that the correlation weakens over time and is stronger in highly variable stars, aiding exoplanet detection strategies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the correlation between photometric variability and RV jitter across different timescales and stellar parameters, updating existing relationships.
Findings
Correlation weakens with increasing time interval between observations.
Stars with photometric variability above 6.5 ppt show stronger correlation.
Updated the relationship between chromospheric activity and RV jitter.
Abstract
The current and upcoming high precision photometric surveys such as TESS, CHEOPS, and PLATO will provide the community with thousands of new exoplanet candidates. As a consequence, the presence of such a correlation is crucial in selecting the targets with the lowest RV jitter for efficient RV follow-up of exoplanetary candidates. Studies of this type are also crucial to design optimized observational strategies to mitigate RV jitter when searching for Earth-mass exoplanets. Our goal is to assess the correlation between high-precision photometric variability measurements and high-precision RV jitter over different time scales. We analyze 171 G, K, and M stars with available TESS high precision photometric time-series and HARPS precise RVs. We derived the stellar parameters for the stars in our sample and measured the RV jitter and photometric variability. We also estimated chromospheric…
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