Convective blueshift strengths of 810 F to M solar-type stars
F. Liebing, S. V. Jeffers, A. Reiners, M. Zechmeister

TL;DR
This study measures and models the convective blueshift in 810 solar-type stars, revealing its dependence on stellar temperature and providing a tool to improve exoplanet detection precision.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for measuring convective blueshift across a large stellar sample and models its variation with stellar temperature, including a novel scaling from solar data.
Findings
Convective blueshift increases with stellar temperature, especially above 5800 K.
A plateau in convective shift is observed for stars between 4100 K and 4700 K.
Stars below 4000 K show negligible blueshift or redshift.
Abstract
The detection of Earth-mass exoplanets in the habitable zone around solar-mass stars using the radial velocity technique requires extremely high precision, on the order of 10cms, below the intrinsic variability of even relatively inactive stars, such as the Sun. One such variable is convective blueshift varying temporally, spatially, and between spectral lines. We develop a new approach for measuring convective blueshift and determine the strength of convective blueshift for 810 stars observed by the HARPS spectrograph, spanning spectral types late-F, G, K, and early-M. We derive a model for infering blueshift velocity for lines of any depth in later-type stars of any effective temperature. Using a custom list of spectral lines, covering a wide range of absorption depths, we create a model for the line-core shift as a function of line depth, commonly known as the third…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
