M. Lafarga
Institut de Ciències de l'Espai
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by M. Lafarga.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
L. Affer; G. Micela; M. Damasso; Ignasi Ribas; A. Suárez Mascareño; J. I. González Hernández; R. Rebolo; E. Poretti; J. Maldonado; G. Leto; I. Pagano; G. Scandariato; R. Zanmar Sanchez; A. Sozzetti; A. S. Bonomo; Luca Malavolta; J. C. Morales; A. Rosich; A. Bignamini; R. Gratton; S. Velasco; D. Cenadelli; R. U. Claudi; Rosario Cosentino; S. Desidera; P. Giacobbe; E. Herrero; M. Lafarga; A. Lanza; Emilio Molinari
Context. Many efforts are currently made to detect Earth-like planets around low-mass stars in almost every extra-solar planet search. M dwarfs are considered ideal targets for Doppler radial velocity searches because their low masses and luminosities make low-mass planets orbiting in these stars’ habitable zones more easily detectable than those around higher mass stars. Nonetheless, the frequency statistics of low-mass planets hosted by low-mass stars remains poorly constrained. Aims. Our M-dwarf radial velocity monitoring with HARPS-N within the collaboration between the Global architectures of Planetary Systems (GAPS) project, the Institut de Ciencies de l’Espai/CSIC-IEEC (ICE) and the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias (IAC) can provide a major contribution to the widening of the current statistics through the in-depth analysis of accurate radial velocity observations in a narrow range of spectral sub-types (79 stars, between dM0 to dM3). Spectral accuracy will enable us to reach the precision needed to detect small planets with a few Earth masses. Our survey will contribute to the surveys devoted to the search for planets around M-dwarfs, mainly focused on the M-dwarf population of the northern emisphere, for which we will provide an estimate of the planet occurrence. Methods. We present here a long-duration radial velocity monitoring of the M1 dwarf star GJu20093998 with HARPS-N to identify periodic signals in the data. Almost simultaneous photometric observations were carried out within the APACHE and EXORAP programs to characterize the stellar activity and to distinguish those due to activity and to the presence of planetary companions from the periodic signals. We ran a Markov chain Monte Carlo simulation and used a Bayesian model selection to determine the number of planets in this system, to estimate their orbital parameters and minimum mass, and to properly treat the activity noise. Results. The radial velocities have a dispersion in excess of their internal errors due to at least four superimposed signals with periods of 30.7, 13.7, 42.5, and 2.65 days. Our data are well described by a two-planet Keplerian (13.7 d and 2.65 d) and a fit with two sinusoidal functions (stellar activity, 30.7 d and 42.5 d). The analysis of spectral indexes based on Ca II H & K and H α lines demonstrates that the periods of 30.7 and 42.5 days are due to chromospheric inhomogeneities modulated by stellar rotation and differential rotation. This result is supported by photometry and is consistent with the results on differential rotation of M stars obtained with Kepler . The shorter periods of 13.74 ± 0.02 d and 2.6498 ± 0.0008 d are well explained with the presence of two planets, with masses of at least 6.26 -0.76 +0.79 M ⊕ and 2.47 ± 0.27 M ⊕ and distances of 0.089 AU and 0.029 AU from the host, respectively.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
Alvaro Garcia-Piquer; Ignasi Ribas; J. C. Morales; L. Affer; G. Micela; M. Damasso; A. Suárez-Mascareño; J. I. González-Hernández; R. Rebolo; E. Herrero; A. Rosich; M. Lafarga; A. Bignamini; A. Sozzetti; R. U. Claudi; Rosario Cosentino; Emilio Molinari; J. Maldonado; A. Maggio; A. Lanza; E. Poretti; I. Pagano; S. Desidera; R. Gratton; G. Piotto; A. S. Bonomo; A. F. Martinez Fiorenzano; P. Giacobbe; Luca Malavolta; Valerio Nascimbeni
The distribution of exoplanets around low-mass stars is still not well understood. Such stars, however, present an excellent opportunity of reaching down to the rocky and habitable planet domains. The number of current detections used for statistical purposes is still quite modest and different surveys, using both photometry and precise radial velocities, are searching for planets around M dwarfs. Our HARPS-N red dwarf exoplanet survey is aimed at the detection of new planets around a sample of 78 selected stars, together with the subsequent characterization of their activity properties. Here we investigate the survey performance and strategy. From 2700 observed spectra, we compare the radial velocity determinations of the HARPS-N DRS pipeline and the HARPS-TERRA code, we calculate the mean activity jitter level, we evaluate the planet detection expectations, and we address the general question of how to define the strategy of spectroscopic surveys in order to be most efficient in the detection of planets. We find that the HARPS-TERRA radial velocities show less scatter and we calculate a mean activity jitter of 2.3 m/s for our sample. For a general radial velocity survey with limited observing time, the number of observations per star is key for the detection efficiency. In the case of an early M-type target sample, we conclude that approximately 50 observations per star with exposure times of 900 s and precisions of about 1 m/s maximizes the number of planet detections.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
L. Tal-Or; M. Zechmeister; Ansgar Reiners; S. V. Jeffers; P. Schöfer; A. Quirrenbach; P. J. Amado; Ignasi Ribas; J. A. Caballero; J. Aceituno; F. F. Bauer; V. J. S. Béjar; S. Czesla; S. Dreizler; B. Fuhrmeister; A. Hatzes; E. N. Johnson; M. Kürster; M. Lafarga; D. Montes; Jérémy Morales; Sabine Reffert; S. Sadegi; W. Seifert; D. Shulyak
Previous simulations predicted the activity-induced radial-velocity (RV) variations of M dwarfs to range from
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
Ignasi Ribas; M. Damasso; J. C. Morales; L. Affer; A. Suárez Mascareño; G. Micela; Jorge Maldonado; J. I. González Hernández; R. Rebolo; G. Scandariato; G. Leto; R. Zanmar Sanchez; Serena Benatti; A. Bignamini; F. Borsa; A. Carbognani; R. U. Claudi; S. Desidera; Massimiliano Esposito; M. Lafarga; A. F. Martinez Fiorenzano; E. Herrero; E. Molinari; Valerio Nascimbeni; I. Pagano; M. Pedani; E. Poretti; M. Rainer; A. Rosich; A. Sozzetti
sim1
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
A. Suárez Mascareño; R. Rebolo; J. I. González Hernández; B. Toledo-Padrón; Ignasi Ribas; L. Affer; G. Micela; M. Damasso; Jorge Maldonado; E. González-Álvarez; G. Leto; I. Pagano; G. Scandariato; A. Sozzetti; A. Lanza; Luca Malavolta; R. U. Claudi; Rosario Cosentino; S. Desidera; P. Giacobbe; A. Maggio; M. Rainer; Massimiliano Esposito; Serena Benatti; M. Pedani; J. C. Morales; E. Herrero; M. Lafarga; A. Rosich; M. Pinamonti
cm/s to
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
D. Baroch; Jérémy Morales; Ignasi Ribas; L. Tal-Or; M. Zechmeister; Ansgar Reiners; J. A. Caballero; A. Quirrenbach; P. J. Amado; S. Dreizler; L. Sairam; S. V. Jeffers; M. Lafarga; V. J. S. Béjar; J. Colomé; M. Cortés-Contreras
sim1