A comprehensive study on radial velocity signals using ESPRESSO: Pushing precision to the 10 cm/s level
P. Figueira, J. P. Faria, A. M. Silva, A. Castro-Gonz\'alez, J. Gomes da Silva, S. G. Sousa, D. Bossini, M. R. Zapatero-Osorio, O. Balsalobre-Ruza, J. Lillo-Box, H. M. Tabernero, V. Adibekyan, R. Allart, S. Benatti, F. Bouchy, A. Cabral, S. Cristiani, X. Dumusque

TL;DR
This study demonstrates ESPRESSO's ability to measure stellar radial velocities with precision down to 10 cm/s, analyzing stellar signals and constraining the presence of Earth-like planets in habitable zones.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of stellar RV signals at unprecedented precision and assesses the potential for detecting low-mass exoplanets using ESPRESSO data.
Findings
Achieved <10 cm/s on-sky RV precision over short timescales
Detected no conclusive planetary signals in the studied stars
Constrained the minimum detectable planet masses to 1.7 Earth masses for certain periods
Abstract
We analyse ESPRESSO data for the stars HD10700, HD20794, HD102365, and HD304636 acquired via its Guaranteed Time Observations (GTO) programme. We characterise the stars' radial velocity (RV) signals down to a precision of 10 cm/s on timescales ranging from minutes to planetary periods falling within the host's habitable zone (HZ). We study the RV signature of pulsation, granulation, and stellar activity, inferring the potential presence of planets around these stars. Thus, we outline the population of planets that while undetectable remain compatible with the available data. A simple model of stellar pulsations successfully reproduced the intra-night RV scatter of HD10700 down to a few cm/s. For HD102365 and HD20794, an additional source of scatter at the level of several 10 cm/s remains necessary to explain the data. A kima analysis was used to evaluate the number of planets…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
