Abstract

One of the best ways to improve our understanding of the stellar activity-induced signal in radial velocity (RV) measurements is through simultaneous high-precision photometric and RV observations. This is of prime importance to mitigate the RV signal induced by stellar activity and therefore unveil the presence of low-mass exoplanets. The K2 Campaign 7 and 8 field-of-views were located in the southern hemisphere, and provided a unique opportunity to gather unprecedented simultaneous high precision photometric observation with K2 and high-precision RV measurements with the HARPS spectrograph to study the relationship between photometric variability and RV jitter. We observed nine stars with different levels of activity; from quiet to very active. We probe the presence of any meaningful relation between measured RV jitter and the simultaneous photometric variation, and also other activity indicators (e.g. BIS, FWHM, $logR'_{HK}$, and F8), by evaluating the strength and significance of the correlation between RVs and each indicator. We found that for the case of very active stars, strong and significant correlations exist between almost all the observables and measured RVs; however, for lower activity levels the correlations become random. Except for the F8 which its strong correlation with RV jitter persists over a wide range of stellar activity level, and thus our result suggests that F8 might be a powerful proxy for activity induced RV jitter. Moreover, we examine the capability of two state-of-the-art modeling techniques, namely the FF' method and SOAP2.0, in accurately predicting the RV jitter amplitude using the simultaneous photometric observation. We found that for the very active stars both techniques can reasonably well predict the amplitude of the RV jitter, however, at lower activity levels the FF' method underpredicts the RV jitter amplitude.

Highlights

  • It is well-known that the presence of stellar active regions on a rotating star can generate astrophysical noise in high-precision photometric and radial velocity (RV) time series

  • Bastien et al (2014) performed a similar study using high-precision RV measurements obtained from Keck and Lick observatories, and high-precision photometric observations of 12 stars observed by Kepler

  • In this paper we present simultaneous high-precision photometric observations and RV measurements for a sample of nine stars

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Summary

Introduction

It is well-known that the presence of stellar active regions (such as star spots or plages) on a rotating star can generate astrophysical noise in high-precision photometric and radial velocity (RV) time series. The main goal of the current paper is to identify and characterize the possible correlation between photometric variability and RV jitter, using simultaneous space-based K2 high-precision photometry and HARPS high-precision RV measurements. Such a full characterization and relationship will be crucial to selecting the best transiting candidates, to be followed up by RV observations, for upcoming missions such as TESS (Ricker et al.2014) and PLATO 2.0 (Rauer et al 2014), and will greatly improve the efficiency of the RV follow-up of planet candidates with the generation of stabilized spectrographs such as ESPRESSO (Pepe et al 2014).

Target selection
K2 data
HARPS observations
Probing the correlations between RVs and other observables
Modeling
The FF0 method
The SOAP tool
Comparison of predicted and observed RV jitter
Spectropolarimetric observation of HD 179205
Conclusion
Full Text
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