The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect in exoplanets
Author
Rivera Colomer, MarDate
2019Abstract
Historically, one of the burning questions of astronomy deals with the exoplanet’s topic, in
other words the search of any planet beyond the Solar System. In this project we introduce a first
theoretical chapter in which the definition of exoplanet is stipulated, the main detection techniques
described and a brief analysis of the instruments used. The aim of this study is studying the
Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect in WASP-69b using CARMENES data. The RM is an anomaly
of the RV due the blockage of part of the host star’s light. It can be detected with high-resolution
spectrographs, such as HARPS and CARMENES, that are enough accurate to detect the Doppler
shifts in the spectrum of the star caused by the planet’s motion. The RM effect can be used to
study and characterise the atmosphere of exoplanets, although it is difficult to resolve the spectral
lines stems from high stellar activity and telluric contamination from the terrestrial atmosphere.
We will observe how the telluric contamination and the stellar activity alter the RV data
and the RM parameters. To do this, we will use a pipeline called SERVAL, removing the highly
contaminated regions to compare if this has an improvement on the results. The data used are from
two transit observations of WASP-69b with the CARMENES spectrograph, located at the Calar
Alto observatory. In addition, we will measure the chromatic RM effect of WASP-69b following
the method described by DiGloria et al. (2015).
In the results we can observe that the errors are clearly reduced when we exclude the contaminated orders, as expected. However, for the chromatic RM effect the errors are too large to
conclude something precise. To yield good results, and get accurate atmospheric properties, more
transits are needed as well as high resolution observations with larger telescopes.