Abstract
High-precision radial-velocimetry (RV) is until now the more efficient way to discover planetary systems. Moreover, photometric transit search missions like CoRoT and Kepler, need spectroscopic RV measurements to establish the planetary nature of a transit candidate and to measure the true mass. An active star has on its photosphere dark spots and bright plages rotating with the star. These inhomogeneities of the stellar surface can induce a variation of the measurement of the RV, due to changes in lines shapes and not to a Doppler motion of the star (e.g. Queloz et al. 2001; Desort et al. 2007; Boisse et al. 2009). We study how the Keplerian fit used to search for planets in RV data is confused by spots and we test an approach to subtract RV jitter based on harmonic decomposition of the star rotation. We use simulations of spectroscopic measurements of rotating spotted stars and validate our approach on active stars monitored by high-precision spectrograph HARPS: CoRoT-7 and Hor. © International Astronomical Union 2011.
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CITATION STYLE
Boisse, I., Bouchy, F., Hebrard, G., Bonfils, X., Santos, N., & Vauclair, S. (2010). Disentangling stellar activity and planetary signals. In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 6, pp. 399–400). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921311020515
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