Abstract

Stellar activity is a potential important limitation to the detection of low mass extrasolar planets with indirect methods (RV, photometry, astrometry). In previous papers, using the Sun as a proxy, we investigated the impact of stellar activity (spots, plages, convection) on the detectability of an Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone (HZ) of solar-type stars with RV techniques. We extend here the detectability study to the case of astrometry. We used the sunspot and plages properties recorded over one solar cycle to infer the astrometric variations that a Sun-like star seen edge-on, 10 pc away, would exhibit, if covered by such spots/bright structures. We compare the signal to the one expected from the astrometric wobble (0.3 {\mu}as) of such a star surrounded by a one Earth-mass planet in the HZ. We also briefly investigate higher levels of activity. The activity-induced astrometric signal along the equatorial plane has an amplitude of typ. less than 0.2 {\mu}as (rms=0.07 {\mu}as), smaller than the one expected from an Earth-mass planet at 1 AU. Hence, for this level of activity, the detectability is governed by the instrumental precision rather than the activity. We show that for instance a one Earth-mass planet at 1 AU would be detected with a monthly visit during less than 5 years and an instrumental precision of 0.8 {\mu}as. A level of activity 5 times higher would still allow such a detection with a precision of 0.35 {\mu}as. We conclude that astrometry is an attractive approach to search for such planets around solar type stars with most levels of stellar activity.

Highlights

  • Stellar activity is recognized as a potentially strong limitation for the indirect detection of planets

  • In previous papers, using the Sun as a proxy, we investigated the impact of stellar activity on the detectability of an Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone (HZ) of solar-type stars with radial velocity techniques

  • We used the sunspot and plages properties recorded over one solar cycle to infer the astrometric variations that a Sun-like star seen edge-on, 10 pc away, would exhibit, if covered by such spots/bright structures

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Summary

Introduction

Stellar activity is recognized as a potentially strong limitation for the indirect detection of planets. Solar-type main-sequence stars, the noise is much lower, but can affect the detection of terrestrial planets. We showed that providing a very tight and long temporal sampling (typically twice a week over more than two orbital periods) and an RV precision in the 10 cm/s range, the photometric contribution of plages and spots should not prevent the RV detection of Earth-mass planets in the HZ. This is no longer true when convection is taken into account. We compare this signal with the RV and photometric signals

Data and results
Astrometric temporal variations
Planet detection in astrometry
Comparison with RV data
Full Text
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