The first high-precision radial velocity search for extra-solar planets

被引:8
|
作者
Walker, Gordon A. H.
机构
[1] 1234, Hewlett Place, Victoria, BC
关键词
DIFFERENTIAL ROTATION; GAMMA-CEPHEI; CHROMOSPHERIC ACTIVITY; ABSORPTION-LINES; EPSILON-ERIDANI; KAPPA(1) CETI; COMPANION; MASS; STELLAR; STARS;
D O I
10.1016/j.newar.2011.06.001
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
The reflex motion of a star induced by a planetary companion is too small to detect by photographic astrometry. The apparent discovery in the 1960s of planetary systems around certain nearby stars, in particular Barnard's star, turned out to be spurious. Conventional stellar radial velocities determined from photographic spectra at that time were also too inaccurate to detect the expected reflex velocity changes. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the introduction of solid-state, signal-generating detectors and absorption cells to impose wavelength fiducials directly on the starlight, reduced radial velocity errors to the point where such a search became feasible. Beginning in 1980, our team from UBC introduced an absorption cell of hydrogen fluoride gas in front of the CFHT coude spectrograph and, for 12 years, monitored the radial velocities of some 29 solar-type stars. Since it was assumed that extra-solar planets would most likely resemble Jupiter in mass and orbit, we were awarded only three or four two-night observing runs each year. Our survey highlighted three potential planet hosting stars, gamma Cep (K1 IV), beta Gem (K0 III), and is an element of Eri (K2 V). The putative planets all resembled Jovian systems with periods and masses of: 2.5 years and 1.4 M-J, 1.6 years and 2.6 M-j, and 6.9 years and 0.9 M-J, respectively. All three were subsequently confirmed from more extensive data by the Texas group led by Cochran and Hatzes who also derived the currently accepted orbital elements. None of these three systems is simple. All five giant stars and the supergiant in our survey proved to be intrinsic velocity variables. When we first drew attention to a possible planetary companion to gamma Cep in 1988 it was classified as a giant, and there was the possibility that its radial velocity variations and those of beta Gem (K0 III) were intrinsic to the stars. A further complication for gamma Cep was the presence of an unseen secondary star in an orbit with a period initially estimated at some 30 years. The implication was that the planetary orbit might not be stable, and a Jovian planet surviving so close to a giant then seemed improbable. Later observations by others showed the stellar binary period was closer to 67 years, the primary was only a sub-giant and a weak, apparently synchronous chromospheric variation disappeared. Chromospheric activity was considered important because k(1) Cet, one of our program stars, showed a significant correlation of its radial velocity curve with chromospheric activity. is an element of Eri is a young, magnetically active star with spots making it a noisy target for radial velocities. While the signature of a highly elliptical orbit (e = 0.6) has persisted for more than three planetary orbits, some feel that even more extensive coverage is needed to confirm the identification despite an apparent complementary astrometric acceleration detected with the Hubble Space Telescope. We confined our initial analyses of the program stars to looking for circular orbits. In retrospect, it appears that some 10% of our sample did in fact have Jovian planetary companions in orbits with periods of years. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:9 / 15
页数:7
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