论文标题
Marvel,一个四型尺寸阵列,用于高精度径向速度监测
MARVEL, a four-telescope array for high-precision radial-velocity monitoring
论文作者
论文摘要
自从1995年在太阳系以外发现一个行星以来,系外行星的研究已从检测到表征其他恒星周围的世界。 TESS(NASA,2019年推出)和柏拉图任务(ESA,计划发射2026年)将发现并限制整个天空中明亮的恒星周围数千个系外行星的大小。需要进行径向速度测量以表征轨道和质量,并完成发现的系外行星系统的密度和组成的图像。 Ariel Mission(ESA,计划发射2028年)将以红外光谱法来表征系外行星氛围。使用地面的光谱法对恒星活性的表征是检索Ariel光谱中行星气氛的光谱足迹的关键。为了实现苔丝,柏拉图和阿里尔太空任务的科学收获,我们计划安装Marvel,作为西班牙La Palma(西班牙)Roque de Los Muchachos天文台现有Mercator望远镜的扩展。 Marvel由四个80 cm望远镜组成,这些望远镜通过光纤连接到单个高分辨率梯形光谱仪,可针对极端精确的径向速度测量进行了优化。它可以同时观察四个不同恒星的径向速度,或者,或者,将四个望远镜的通量结合在一起,指向一个频谱中一个微弱目标。漫威是由鲁文(比利时)领导的合作建造的,由英国,奥地利,澳大利亚,瑞典,丹麦和西班牙的贡献。在本文中,我们介绍了漫威仪器,特别关注光谱仪的光学设计和预期性能,并报告项目的状态。
Since the first discovery of a planet outside of our Solar System in 1995, exoplanet research has shifted from detecting to characterizing worlds around other stars. The TESS (NASA, launched 2019) and PLATO mission (ESA, planned launch 2026) will find and constrain the size of thousands of exoplanets around bright stars all over the sky. Radial velocity measurements are needed to characterize the orbit and mass, and complete the picture of densities and composition of the exoplanet systems found. The Ariel mission (ESA, planned launch 2028) will characterize exoplanet atmospheres with infrared spectroscopy. Characterization of stellar activity using optical spectroscopy from the ground is key to retrieve the spectral footprint of the planetary atmosphere in Ariel's spectra. To enable the scientific harvest of the TESS, PLATO and Ariel space missions, we plan to install MARVEL as an extension of the existing Mercator Telescope at the Roque De Los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma (SPAIN). MARVEL consists of an array of four 80 cm telescopes linked through optical fibers to a single high-resolution echelle spectrograph, optimized for extreme-precision radial velocity measurements. It can observe the radial velocities of four different stars simultaneously or, alternatively, combine the flux from four telescopes pointing to a single faint target in one spectrum. MARVEL is constructed by a KU Leuven (Belgium) led collaboration, with contributions from the UK, Austria, Australia, Sweden, Denmark and Spain. In this paper, we present the MARVEL instrument with special focus on the optical design and expected performance of the spectrograph, and report on the status of the project.