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PRECISION RADIAL VELOCITIES WITH AN IODINE ABSORPTION CELL

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© 1992. The Astronomical Society of the Pacific. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Geoffrey W. Marcy and R. P. Butler 1992 PASP 104 270 DOI 10.1086/132989

1538-3873/104/674/270

ABSTRACT

We have used gaseous iodine for generating reference absorption lines in stellar spectra taken at high resolution. A major advance involves the use of a fast echelle spectrograph and a 2048X2048 CCD which acquires the near ultraviolet, the entire visible, and the near infrared spectrum in a single exposure. The superimposed iodine lines provide both a highly precise wavelength scale (calibrated with a Fourier transform spectrum) and a specification of the spectrograph PSF in situ_ over the entire echelle format. Test observations of three solar-type stars exhibit a velocity scatter of less than 25 m s-1 over a one-year duration, and only 1/5 of the available spectrum has been employed in the analysis to date. Velocity precision of 50 m-1 can be achieved for magnitude V=12 in one hour exposures on a 3-m telescope. We discuss an on-going project to detect brown dwarf and planetary companions to F, G, K, and M-type main sequence stars, designed to complement other efforts. The current velocity precision permits detection of companions with masses as low as 3 MJup located up to 5 AU from the star. We also discuss the use of precision velocities in revising cepheid distances.

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10.1086/132989