论文标题
从600个行星搜索星的分析中,天体物理学对径向速度抖动的洞察力
Astrophysical Insights into Radial Velocity Jitter from an Analysis of 600 Planet-search Stars
论文作者
论文摘要
行星的径向速度(RV)检测受到恒星表面上诱导随机信号或“抖动”的恒星表面上的障碍,它们可以淹没甚至模仿行星信号。在这里,我们以逐渐逐步的基础是经验和仔细测量来自加利福尼亚星球搜索(CPS)样本的600多颗恒星的RV抖动。作为此过程的一部分,我们探讨了恒星周期的活动-RV相关性,并包括列出了我们去除的每个表面上伴随诱导的信号以及我们注意到的每个活动周期的附录。然后,我们使用Brewer等人的精确恒星特性。 (2017年)将样品分为恒星质量的仓,并以活动和进化状态检查趋势。我们发现RV抖动跟踪恒星的演变,并且通常,恒星通过RV抖动的不同阶段进化:年轻恒星中的抖动是由磁性活动驱动的,而较老的恒星的抖动是对流驱动的,并由颗粒和振荡主导。对于0.7至1.7 $ m _ {\ odot} $,我们确定了“抖动最小值”(活动驱动和对流驱动的抖动具有相似的幅度),并发现在子阶段甚至巨大的阶段中,更大的巨星在他们的寿命后期到达了这一抖动最小值。最后,我们评论了这些结果如何从tess等过境调查的后续目标到未来的RV调查的目标选择,从优先考虑将来的径向速度努力。
Radial velocity (RV) detection of planets is hampered by astrophysical processes on the surfaces of stars that induce a stochastic signal, or "jitter", which can drown out or even mimic planetary signals. Here, we empirically and carefully measure the RV jitter of more than 600 stars from the California Planet Search (CPS) sample on a star-by-star basis. As part of this process we explore the activity-RV correlation of stellar cycles and include appendices listing every ostensibly companion-induced signal we removed and every activity cycle we noted. We then use precise stellar properties from Brewer et al. (2017) to separate the sample into bins of stellar mass and examine trends with activity and with evolutionary state. We find RV jitter tracks stellar evolution and that in general, stars evolve through different stages of RV jitter: the jitter in younger stars is driven by magnetic activity, while the jitter in older stars is convectively-driven and dominated by granulation and oscillations. We identify the "jitter minimum" -- where activity-driven and convectively-driven jitter have similar amplitudes -- for stars between 0.7 and 1.7 $M_{\odot}$ and find that more massive stars reach this jitter minimum later in their lifetime, in the subgiant or even giant phases. Finally, we comment on how these results can inform future radial velocity efforts, from prioritization of follow-up targets from transit surveys like TESS to target selection of future RV surveys.