Abstract
Context: The discovery of the short-period giant exoplanet population, the so-called hot Jupiter population, and their link to brown dwarfs and low-mass stars challenges the conventional view of planet formation and evolution.Aims: We took advantage of the multi-fiber facilities GIRAFFE and UVES/FLAMES (VLT) to perform the first large radial velocity survey using a multi-fiber spectrograph to detect planetary, brown-dwarf candidates and binary stars. Methods: We observed 816 stars during 5 consecutive half-nights. These stars were selected within one of the exoplanet fields of the space mission CoRoT. Results: We computed the radial velocities of these stars and showed that a systematic error floor of 30 m s-1 was reached over 5 consecutive nights with the GIRAFFE instrument. Over the whole sample the Doppler measurements allowed us to identify a sample of 50 binaries, 9 active or blended binary stars, 5 unsolved cases, 14 exoplanets and brown-dwarf candidates. Further higher precision Doppler measurements are now necessary to confirm and better characterize these candidates.Conclusions.This study demonstrates the efficiency of a multi-fiber approach for large radial-velocity surveys in search for exoplanets as well as the follow-up of transiting exoplanet candidates. The spectroscopic characterization of the large stellar population is an interesting by-product of such missions as the CoRoT space mission. © 2008 ESO.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Loeillet, B., Bouchy, F., Deleuil, M., Royer, F., Bouret, C., Moutou, C., … Santos, C. (2008). Doppler search for exoplanet candidates and binary stars in a CoRoT field using a multi-fiber spectrograph. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 479(3), 865–875. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20077176
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.