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Activity Number: 348 - Statistical Engineering and Applications in Physical Sciences
Type: Contributed
Date/Time: Wednesday, August 5, 2020 : 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM
Sponsor: Section on Physical and Engineering Sciences
Abstract #313374
Title: A Hermite-Gaussian Based Radial Velocity Estimation Method
Author(s): Parker Holzer* and Jessi Cisewski-Kehe and Debra Fischer and Lily Zhao
Companies: Yale University and Yale University and Yale University and Yale University
Keywords: astrostatistics; astronomy; exoplanets; Hermite-Gaussian functions; linear regression; approximation theory
Abstract:

As the first successful technique used to detect exoplanets orbiting distant stars, the Radial Velocity Method aims to detect a periodic Doppler shift in a star's spectrum. We introduce a new, mathematically rigorous, approach to detect such a signal that accounts for functional relationships of neighboring wavelengths, minimizes the role of wavelength interpolation, accounts for heteroskedastic noise, and easily allows for statistical inference. Using Hermite-Gaussian functions, we show that the problem of detecting a Doppler shift in the spectrum can be reduced to linear regression in many settings. A simulation study demonstrates that the proposed method is able to accurately estimate an individual spectrum's radial velocity with precision below 0.3 m/s. Furthermore, the new method outperforms the traditional Cross-Correlation Function approach by reducing the root mean squared error up to 15 cm/s. The proposed method is also demonstrated on a new set of observations from the EXtreme PREcision Spectrometer for the star 51 Pegasi, and recovers estimates that agree with previous studies of this planetary system. The method is implemented in the open-source R package rvmethod.


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