Abstract

Context. The High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) spectrograph has been mounted since 2003 at the ESO 3.6 m telescope in La Silla and provides state-of-the-art stellar radial velocity (RV) measurements with a precision down to ∼1 m s−1. The spectra are extracted with a dedicated data-reduction software (DRS), and the RVs are computed by cross-correlating with a numerical mask. Aims. This study has three main aims: (i) Create easy access to the public HARPS RV data set. (ii) Apply the new public SpEctrum Radial Velocity AnaLyser (SERVAL) pipeline to the spectra, and produce a more precise RV data set. (iii) Determine whether the precision of the RVs can be further improved by correcting for small nightly systematic effects. Methods. For each star observed with HARPS, we downloaded the publicly available spectra from the ESO archive and recomputed the RVs with SERVAL. This was based on fitting each observed spectrum with a high signal-to-noise ratio template created by coadding all the available spectra of that star. We then computed nightly zero-points (NZPs) by averaging the RVs of quiet stars. Results. By analyzing the RVs of the most RV-quiet stars, whose RV scatter is < 5 m s−1, we find that SERVAL RVs are on average more precise than DRS RVs by a few percent. By investigating the NZP time series, we find three significant systematic effects whose magnitude is independent of the software that is used to derive the RV: (i) stochastic variations with a magnitude of ∼1 m s−1; (ii) long-term variations, with a magnitude of ∼1 m s−1 and a typical timescale of a few weeks; and (iii) 20–30 NZPs that significantly deviate by a few m s−1. In addition, we find small (≲1 m s−1) but significant intra-night drifts in DRS RVs before the 2015 intervention, and in SERVAL RVs after it. We confirm that the fibre exchange in 2015 caused a discontinuous RV jump that strongly depends on the spectral type of the observed star: from ∼14 m s−1 for late F-type stars to ∼ − 3 m s−1 for M dwarfs. The combined effect of extracting the RVs with SERVAL and correcting them for the systematics we find is an improved average RV precision: an improvement of ∼5% for spectra taken before the 2015 intervention, and an improvement of ∼15% for spectra taken after it. To demonstrate the quality of the new RV data set, we present an updated orbital solution of the GJ 253 two-planet system. Conclusions. Our NZP-corrected SERVAL RVs can be retrieved from a user-friendly public database. It provides more than 212 000 RVs for about 3000 stars along with much auxiliary information, such as the NZP corrections, various activity indices, and DRS-CCF products.

Highlights

  • The High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS, Pepe et al 2002; Mayor et al 2003) has been operated since 2003 at the 3.6 m telescope of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in La Silla

  • We provide for each epoch auxiliary observational information such as exposure time, signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of the spectra at 550 nm, quality flag, type of data-reduction software (DRS) binary mask used, principal investigator (PI), and ESO program-ID of the observation

  • We recalculated Doppler velocity measurements of the publicly accessible spectra and performed a stellar line analysis, which is important for validating planetary induced Doppler signals. For this part of the analysis, we applied the SpEctrum Radial Velocity AnaLyser (SERVAL) radial velocity (RV) pipeline, with which we derived slightly more precise RV measurements than those derived by the official ESO-DRS pipeline

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Summary

Introduction

The High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS, Pepe et al 2002; Mayor et al 2003) has been operated since 2003 at the 3.6 m telescope of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in La Silla. It is the first fibre-fed high-resolution echelle spectrograph capable of measuring stellar radial velocity (RV) with a precision down to ∼1 m s−1. HARPS is the perhaps the most important Doppler validation instrument for the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS; Ricker et al 2015) in the southern hemisphere, which is uncovering hundreds of small rocky transiting exoplanet candidates around nearby stars. HARPS offers a large publicly available spectral archive that has already allowed the post-detection Doppler validation of TESS candidates, for example, GJ 143, HD 23472 (Trifonov et al 2019a), HD 15337 (Gandolfi et al 2019; Dumusque et al 2019), and GJ 357 (Luque et al 2019)

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