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       11.6 Toward Earth Analogs

       References

       12 Contributions to the Error Budget

       12.1 Guiding Errors

       12.2 Changes in the Instrumental Setup

       12.3 Detector Errors

       12.3.1 Electronic Noise Pickup

       12.3.2 CCD Inhomogeneities and Discontinuities

       12.3.3 Charge Transfer Effects

       12.4 Errors in the Barycentric Correction

       12.4.1 Inaccurate Time of Observations

       12.4.2 Inaccurate Telescope Coordinates

       12.4.3 Inaccurate Stellar Positions

       12.4.4 Differential Barycentric Motion

       12.5 The Secular Acceleration

       12.6 Telluric Line Contamination

       12.7 Moonlight Contamination

       References

       13 The Rossiter–McLaughlin Effect

       13.1 Introduction

       13.2 Origin of the Rossiter–McLaughlin Effect

       13.3 The Rossiter–McLaughlin Effect in Exoplanets

       13.3.1 The Radial Velocity Amplitude

       13.3.2 The Spin–Orbit Alignment

       13.4 Spin Axis of the Star

       References

      To Gordon Walker and Bill Cochran, early pioneers in the radial velocity detection of exoplanets who inspired this work.

      The first radial velocity (RV) measurements on a star using the Doppler method were made late in the 19th century. The discovery of the first exoplanet, found using the Doppler method, was made near the end of the 20th century. Why did the discovery of exoplanets take nearly one hundred years? In short, it is due to the spectacular improvement in the measurement precision—a 10,000-fold increase over the past 100 years, with most improvements occurring in the past few decades. This is the subject of this book.

      The field of exoplanets has developed into one of the most exciting and vibrant fields in astronomy, and that is all owed to the Doppler method. By discovering the first exoplanets, it essentially created the field. Although the detection efficiency of exoplanets using the Doppler method has been surpassed by the photometric transit method, the Doppler method still plays a vital role in confirming transit discoveries and giving a mass, one of the most fundamental parameters of a planet. It is one of the few methods (along with astrometry) that gives you a “dynamical” mass—dynamical in the sense that one derives the mass using the laws of Kepler and Newton, rather than statistics and theoretical models. The Doppler method still ranks as one of the most important exoplanet detection methods in use today.

      The pioneering transit-search space missions COnvection ROtation and planetary Transits (CoRoT) and Kepler have produced a treasure chest of transiting planets. As of this writing, NASAʼs Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is performing a transit survey among the brightest stars in the sky, and the RV community has its hands full determining the mass for candidate transiting planets. For all of these missions, ground-based spectroscopic measurements, in particular RV measurements, have played a vital role in characterizing the planet discoveries. Within a decade, the PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars (PLATO) mission of the European Space Agency will also search for transiting planets around bright stars, but with the goal of finding Earth-like planets in the habitable zone of stars. So, the Doppler method is poised to continue its important role in exoplanet studies well into the 2030s.

      Although almost 1000 exoplanets have been discovered with the Doppler method, this book will not focus on the results from the various RV planet search programs. This can be gleaned from the literature or from Perrymanʼs The Exoplanet Handbook. Rather, this work will focus purely on the method. This includes how one can achieve a high RV measurement precision as well as the challenges, limitations, and potentials of this technique. It will include other aspects of the method, such as instrumentation, wavelength calibration, finding periodic signals in RV time series, interpreting the signals that you find, and Keplerian orbits. An important aspect is stellar variability, which has been known to trick more than a few astronomers (this author included) into thinking that they have discovered an exoplanet. In short, it will cover every aspect needed for one to detect exoplanets with the RV method, a sort of “handbook” for the Doppler method.

      If the reader wants to purse RV follow-up of transiting planets from space missions or wants to perform exoplanet RV surveys, this book should be useful. When it comes to exoplanet discoveries, it is easy to fall into traps, to be misled, or to arrive at erroneous conclusions. As the physicist Richard Feynman once famously said, “Science is a way of trying not to fool yourself. The principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool.” This is especially true in the field of exoplanets. I hope that this book will ease the path of those embarking on the use of the Doppler method for the detection and characterization of exoplanets and hopefully, to avoid pitfalls.

      It is a pleasure to thank all of the scientists and students who helped in the preparation of this book. It would not have been possible without them.

      I thank the Tautenburg Observing School: Jaime Avalos, Clark Baker, Dugasa Belay Zeleke, Richard Bischoff, Martin Blazek, Sireesha Chamarthi, Michael Debus, Jana Dvorakova, Vanessa Fahrenschon, Andreea Gornea, Sascha Grziwa, Engin Keles, Hannah Kellermann, Sarah-Jane Köntges, Oliver Lux, Priscilla Muheki, Eva Plávalová Jan Subjak, Jerusalem Tamirat, Fabian Wunderlich, and Jiri Zak. They were kind enough to give up observing time for some crucial tests that are presented in this book.

      Silvia Sabotta provided me with an RV time series made with the iodine cell. Priyanka Chaturvedi produced the synthetic stellar spectra used in this work. Figures and data highlighting results from CARMENES were provided by Ansgar Reiners, Ignas Ribas, Guillem Anglada-Escudé, Mathias Zechmeister, and of course, the entire CARMENES consortium. Ulf Seeman provided valuable figures and input for the CRIRES+ gas absorption cell.

      A special thanks goes to Michael Hartmann who provided me with results from his PhD. His analysis of two roAp stars nicely demonstrated how the use of different templates for calculating the RV can produce conflicting results. He also provided

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