Radial-Velocity Variability of the Sun as a Star with HAPRS And HAPRS-N
Abstract
Since we can resolve the surface of the Sun directly, we can explore the origin of radial-velocity variations induced by individual solar surface features such as faculae/plage, sunspots and granulation.I will present my recent investigation of the radial-velocity variations of the Sun as a star, based on high-resolution HARPS spectra of reflected sunlight and simultaneous images from the Solar Dynamics Observatory. We found that faculae are the dominant source of activity-induced radial-velocity variations, via suppression of convective blueshift. We investigated possible proxies for activity-induced radial-velocity variations and found that optical lightcurves can only provide a partial representation of these signals; the full-disc magnetic flux, however, is an excellent tracer. In addition to this dataset, the HARPS-N spectrograph has been operating with a new solar telescope feed since 2015 July. I will present results from the first year observations, which show radial-velocity variations of up to 7-8 m/s.Identifying proxies for solar radial-velocity variations is key to understanding the radial-velocity variability of other Sun-like stars, and is also essential for other investigations such as exoplanet detection surveys.
- Publication:
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19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun (CS19)
- Pub Date:
- June 2016
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2016csss.confE..47H
- Keywords:
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- exoplanets detection and characterisation;
- high-resolution spectroscopy;
- Sunspots;
- faculae/plage;
- radial-velocity observations;
- Sun;
- magnetic activity;
- Zenodo community cs19