Attaining Doppler Precision of 10 cm s -1 with a Lock-in Amplified Spectrometer

  • Jensen-Clem R
  • Muirhead P
  • Bottom M
  • et al.
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Abstract

We explore the radial velocity performance benefits of coupling starlight to a fast-scanning interferometer and a fast-readout spectrometer with zero readout noise. By rapidly scanning an interferometer we can decouple wavelength calibration errors from precise radial velocity measurements, exploiting the advantages of lock-in amplification. In a Bayesian framework, we investigate the correlation between wavelength calibration errors and resulting radial velocity errors. We construct an end-to-end simulation of this approach to address the feasibility of achieving 10 cm/s radial velocity precision on a typical Sun-like star using existing, 5-meter-class telescopes. We find that such a precision can be reached in a single night, opening up possibilities for ground-based detections of Earth-Sun analog systems.

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Jensen-Clem, R., Muirhead, P. S., Bottom, M., Wallace, J. K., Vasisht, G., & Asher Johnson, J. (2015). Attaining Doppler Precision of 10 cm s -1 with a Lock-in Amplified Spectrometer. Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 127(957), 1105–1112. https://doi.org/10.1086/683796

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