The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. Line-by-line sensitivity to activity in M dwarfs
M. Lafarga, I. Ribas, M. Zechmeister, A. Reiners, \'A., L\'opez-Gallifa, D. Montes, A. Quirrenbach, P. J. Amado, J. A. Caballero, M., Azzaro, V. J. S. B\'ejar, A. P. Hatzes, Th. Henning, S. V. Jeffers, A., Kaminski, M. K\"urster, P. Sch\"ofer, A. Schweitzer, H. M. Tabernero

TL;DR
This study investigates how individual spectral lines in M dwarf stars are affected by stellar activity and demonstrates that selecting activity-insensitive lines can significantly improve the precision of radial velocity measurements for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
The paper presents a line-by-line analysis of stellar spectra to classify lines by their sensitivity to activity, enabling improved RV measurements by mitigating activity effects in M dwarfs.
Findings
Activity-sensitive lines vary between stars.
Using activity-insensitive lines reduces RV scatter by 2-5 times.
Line-by-line approach yields precise RVs despite spectral complexity.
Abstract
Radial velocities (RVs) measured from high-resolution stellar spectra are routinely used to detect and characterise orbiting exoplanet companions. The different lines present in stellar spectra are created by several species, which are non-uniformly affected by stellar variability features such as spots or faculae. Stellar variability distorts the shape of the spectral absorption lines from which precise RVs are measured, posing one of the main problems in the study of exoplanets. In this work we aim to study how the spectral lines present in M dwarfs are independently impacted by stellar activity. We used CARMENES optical spectra of six active early- and mid-type M dwarfs to compute line-by-line RVs and study their correlation with several well-studied proxies of stellar activity. We are able to classify spectral lines based on their sensitivity to activity in five M dwarfs displaying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
