A decade of radial-velocity monitoring of Vega and new limits on the presence of planets
Spencer A. Hurt, Samuel N. Quinn, David W. Latham, Andrew Vanderburg,, Gilbert A. Esquerdo, Michael L. Calkins, Perry Berlind, Ruth Angus, Christian, A. Latham, and George Zhou

TL;DR
This study analyzes 10 years of Vega's spectra to detect surface features, magnetic activity, and potential planets, revealing a candidate planet and setting limits on other planetary companions.
Contribution
First long-term radial velocity monitoring of Vega combined with photometry and imaging, providing new insights into stellar surface features, magnetic fields, and exoplanet detection limits.
Findings
Confirmed surface features with a 0.676-day period.
Detected Vega's photometric rotational modulation at 10 ppm.
Identified a candidate 2.43-day period radial velocity signal.
Abstract
We present an analysis of 1524 spectra of Vega spanning 10 years, in which we search for periodic radial velocity variations. A signal with a periodicity of 0.676 days and a semi-amplitude of ~10 m/s is consistent with the rotation period measured over much shorter time spans by previous spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric studies, confirming the presence of surface features on this A0 star. The timescale of evolution of these features can provide insight into the mechanism that sustains the weak magnetic fields in normal A type stars. Modeling the radial velocities with a Gaussian process using a quasi-periodic kernel suggests that the characteristic spot evolution timescale is ~180 days, though we cannot exclude the possibility that it is much longer. Such long timescales may indicate the presence of failed fossil magnetic fields on Vega. TESS data reveal Vega's photometric…
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