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Spatially resolved spectroscopy across stellar surfaces : I. Using exoplanet transits to analyze 3D stellar atmospheres

Dravins, Dainis LU orcid ; Ludwig, Hans Günter LU ; Dahlén, Erik and Pazira, Hiva (2017) In Astronomy and Astrophysics 605.
Abstract

Context. High-precision stellar analyses require hydrodynamic modeling to interpret chemical abundances or oscillation modes. Exoplanet atmosphere studies require stellar background spectra to be known along the transit path while detection of Earth analogs require stellar microvariability to be understood. Hydrodynamic 3D models can be computed for widely different stars but have been tested in detail only for the Sun with its resolved surface features. Model predictions include spectral line shapes, asymmetries, and wavelength shifts, and their center-To-limb changes across stellar disks. Aims. We observe high-resolution spectral line profiles across spatially highly resolved stellar surfaces, which are free from the effects of... (More)

Context. High-precision stellar analyses require hydrodynamic modeling to interpret chemical abundances or oscillation modes. Exoplanet atmosphere studies require stellar background spectra to be known along the transit path while detection of Earth analogs require stellar microvariability to be understood. Hydrodynamic 3D models can be computed for widely different stars but have been tested in detail only for the Sun with its resolved surface features. Model predictions include spectral line shapes, asymmetries, and wavelength shifts, and their center-To-limb changes across stellar disks. Aims. We observe high-resolution spectral line profiles across spatially highly resolved stellar surfaces, which are free from the effects of spatial smearing and rotational broadening present in full-disk spectra, enabling comparisons to synthetic profiles from 3D models. Methods. During exoplanet transits, successive stellar surface portions become hidden and differential spectroscopy between various transit phases provides spectra of small surface segments temporarily hidden behind the planet. Planets cover no more than ~1% of any main-sequence star, enabling high spatial resolution but demanding very precise observations. Realistically measurable quantities are identified through simulated observations of synthetic spectral lines. Results. In normal stars, line profile ratios between various transit phases may vary by 0.5%, requiring S/N 5000 for meaningful spectral reconstruction. While not yet realistic for individual spectral lines, this is achievable for cool stars by averaging over numerous lines with similar parameters. Conclusions. For bright host stars of large transiting planets, spatially resolved spectroscopy is currently practical. More observable targets are likely to be found in the near future by ongoing photometric searches.

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author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Hydrodynamics, Line: profiles, Planets and satellites: gaseous planets, Stars: Atmospheres, Stars: solar-Type, Techniques: spectroscopic
in
Astronomy and Astrophysics
volume
605
article number
A90
pages
13 pages
publisher
EDP Sciences
external identifiers
  • scopus:85029519622
ISSN
0004-6361
DOI
10.1051/0004-6361/201730900
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
4180ea95-d161-48e0-8b83-9363728f42bc
date added to LUP
2017-11-22 15:25:28
date last changed
2022-04-17 17:11:04
@article{4180ea95-d161-48e0-8b83-9363728f42bc,
  abstract     = {{<p>Context. High-precision stellar analyses require hydrodynamic modeling to interpret chemical abundances or oscillation modes. Exoplanet atmosphere studies require stellar background spectra to be known along the transit path while detection of Earth analogs require stellar microvariability to be understood. Hydrodynamic 3D models can be computed for widely different stars but have been tested in detail only for the Sun with its resolved surface features. Model predictions include spectral line shapes, asymmetries, and wavelength shifts, and their center-To-limb changes across stellar disks. Aims. We observe high-resolution spectral line profiles across spatially highly resolved stellar surfaces, which are free from the effects of spatial smearing and rotational broadening present in full-disk spectra, enabling comparisons to synthetic profiles from 3D models. Methods. During exoplanet transits, successive stellar surface portions become hidden and differential spectroscopy between various transit phases provides spectra of small surface segments temporarily hidden behind the planet. Planets cover no more than ~1% of any main-sequence star, enabling high spatial resolution but demanding very precise observations. Realistically measurable quantities are identified through simulated observations of synthetic spectral lines. Results. In normal stars, line profile ratios between various transit phases may vary by 0.5%, requiring S/N 5000 for meaningful spectral reconstruction. While not yet realistic for individual spectral lines, this is achievable for cool stars by averaging over numerous lines with similar parameters. Conclusions. For bright host stars of large transiting planets, spatially resolved spectroscopy is currently practical. More observable targets are likely to be found in the near future by ongoing photometric searches.</p>}},
  author       = {{Dravins, Dainis and Ludwig, Hans Günter and Dahlén, Erik and Pazira, Hiva}},
  issn         = {{0004-6361}},
  keywords     = {{Hydrodynamics; Line: profiles; Planets and satellites: gaseous planets; Stars: Atmospheres; Stars: solar-Type; Techniques: spectroscopic}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{09}},
  publisher    = {{EDP Sciences}},
  series       = {{Astronomy and Astrophysics}},
  title        = {{Spatially resolved spectroscopy across stellar surfaces : I. Using exoplanet transits to analyze 3D stellar atmospheres}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201730900}},
  doi          = {{10.1051/0004-6361/201730900}},
  volume       = {{605}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}