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First radial velocity results from the MINiature Exoplanet Radial Velocity Array (MINERVA)

Authors :
Timothy D. Morton
Ana Colon
Philip S. Muirhead
Jon de Vera
Peter Plavchan
Connor Robinson
Emilio E. Falco
Adam S. Bolton
Samson A. Johnson
Gilbert A. Esquerdo
John Hamlin
William J. Schap
Sharon X. Wang
Gabriel Grell
Jason D. Eastman
Anthony Sergi
Kevin O. Rivera-García
Juliana Garcia-Mejia
Audrey Houghton
George Lawrence
Eric Blackhurst
Matthew A. Cornachione
Jonathan Horner
Annie Kirby
Justin Myles
Claire Geneser
Robert A. Wittenmyer
Michael Bottom
David H. Sliski
Tony Reed
Samuel Halverson
Nate McCrady
Ashley D. Baker
Jason T. Wright
John Asher Johnson
Chantanelle Nava
Howard M. Relles
Julien Andrew Luebbers
S. Janssens
Cullen H. Blake
Bryson Cale
Graeme Jonas
Perry Berlind
Forest Chaput de Saintonge
Ted Groner
Steven R. Gibson
Michael L. Calkins
Reed Riddle
Jonathan J. Swift
Maurice Wilson
Damien Jones
Pascal Fortin
M. Henderson
Thomas G. Beatty
Stuart I. Barnes
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
arXiv, 2019.

Abstract

The MINiature Exoplanet Radial Velocity Array (MINERVA) is a dedicated observatory of four 0.7m robotic telescopes fiber-fed to a KiwiSpec spectrograph. The MINERVA mission is to discover super-Earths in the habitable zones of nearby stars. This can be accomplished with MINERVA's unique combination of high precision and high cadence over long time periods. In this work, we detail changes to the MINERVA facility that have occurred since our previous paper. We then describe MINERVA's robotic control software, the process by which we perform 1D spectral extraction, and our forward modeling Doppler pipeline. In the process of improving our forward modeling procedure, we found that our spectrograph's intrinsic instrumental profile is stable for at least nine months. Because of that, we characterized our instrumental profile with a time-independent, cubic spline function based on the profile in the cross dispersion direction, with which we achieved a radial velocity precision similar to using a conventional "sum-of-Gaussians" instrumental profile: 1.8 m s$^{-1}$ over 1.5 months on the RV standard star HD 122064. Therefore, we conclude that the instrumental profile need not be perfectly accurate as long as it is stable. In addition, we observed 51 Peg and our results are consistent with the literature, confirming our spectrograph and Doppler pipeline are producing accurate and precise radial velocities.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PASP, Peer-Reviewed and Accepted

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94b44f7847d793e412f816fc94530d12
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1904.09991