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vol.57 número1Artificial Neural Network Modeling of the Conformable Fractional Isothermal Gas SpheresConnecting the formation of stars and planets. II: coupling the angular momentum of stars with the angular momentum of planets índice de autoresíndice de materiabúsqueda de artículos
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Revista mexicana de astronomía y astrofísica

versión impresa ISSN 0185-1101

Rev. mex. astron. astrofis vol.57 no.1 Ciudad de México abr. 2021  Epub 30-Sep-2021

https://doi.org/10.22201/ia.01851101p.2021.57.01.15 

Articles

Connecting the Formation of Stars and Planets. I - Spectroscopic Characterization of Host Stars with TIGRE

L. M. Flor-Torres1 

R. Coziol1 

K.-P. Schröder1 

D. Jack1 

J. H. M. M. Schmitt2 

S. Blanco-Cuaresma3 

1Departamento de Astronomía, Universidad de Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Gto., México.

2Hamburger Sternwarte, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

3Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA, USA.


ABSTRACT

In search for a connection between the formation of stars and the formation of planets, a new semi-automatic spectral analysis method using iSpec was developed for the TIGRE telescope installed in Guanajuato, Mexico. TIGRE is a 1.2m robotic telescope, equipped with an Echelle spectrograph (HEROS), with a resolution R ⋍ 20000. iSpec is a synthetic spectral fitting program for stars that allows to determine in an homogeneous way their fundamental parameters: effective temperature, Teff , surface gravity, log g, metallicities, [M=H] and [Fe=H], and rotational velocity, V sin i. In this first article we test our method by analysing the spectra of 46 stars, hosts of exoplanets, obtained with the TIGRE.

Key Words planetary systems; stars; formation; stars; fundamental parameters; stars; rotation

RESUMEN

En la búsqueda de una conexión entre la formación estelar y planetaria, se desarrolló un nuevo método semiautomático de análisis espectral estelar usando iSpec, para el telescopio TIGRE, instalado en Guanajuato, México. El TIGRE es un telescopio robótico de 1.2m, el cual está equipado con el espectrógrafo Echelle HEROS, que tiene una resolución R ≃ 20; 000. iSpec es un programa de ajuste espectral sintético para estrellas que permite determinar de manera homogénea sus parámetros fundamentales: temperatura efectiva, Teff, gravedad superficial, log g, metalicidades, [M=H] y [Fe=H], y velocidad de rotación, V sin i. En este artículo, probamos nuestro método, analizando una muestra de 46 estrellas que albergan exoplanetas observadas por el TIGRE.

1.Introduction

Since the discovery of the first planet orbiting another star in the 1990s, the number of confirmed exoplanets had steadily increased reaching in November of last year 4133.1 The urgent tasks with which we are faced now are determining the compositions of these exoplanets and understanding how they formed. However, although that should have been straightforward (Seager 2010), the detection of new types of planets had complicated the matter, changing in a crucial way our understanding of the formation of planetary systems around stars like the Sun.

The first new type of planets to be discovered was the “hot Jupiters” (HJs; Mayor & Queloz 1995), which are gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn, but with extremely small periods, , consistent with semi-major axes smaller than . The existence of HJs is problematic because, according to the model of formation of the solar system, they can only form in the protoplanetary disk (PPD) where it is cold enough for volatile compounds such as water, ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide and monoxide to condense into solid ice grains (Plummer et al. 2005). In the Solar System, this happens beyond the ice-line, which is located close to 3 AU (Martin & Livio 2012). This implies that HJs must have formed farther out in the cold regions of the PPD, then migrated close to their stars (Lin et al. 1996). Subsequent discoveries have then shown that far from being exceptional, artifacts of an observational bias, HJs turned out to be very common around Sun-like stars, suggesting that large scale migration is a standard feature of the planet formation process (Butler et al. 2000; Udry & Santos 2007).

Two other new types of planets discovered are the “Super-Earths” (Leconte et al. 2009; Valencia et al. 2006; Martin & Livio 2015; Chabrier et al. 2009) and the “mini-Neptunes” (Gandolfi et al. 2017). These too were found to be common and very close to their stars, which, consequently, also makes them “hot”. Their discoveries are important for two reasons. The first reason is that it makes the alternative “in situ” model for the formation of HJs (e.g., Boss 1997) a special model, since it cannot explain the large mass range and diversity of the “hot” exoplanets observed (Super-Earths and mini-Neptunes in situ models are discussed in Raymond et al. 2008; Chiang & Laughlin 2013). The second reason is that it was recently established by Lee et al. (2017) that their numbers around their host stars fall rapidly for periods P < 10 days (≈0.09 AU), which, assuming Keplerian orbits, clearly implies they all formed farther out (beyond 0.1 AU) and have migrated inward, but with a good many disappearing into their stars. This, once again, puts large scale migration at the front scene of the planet formation process.

This brings us to the present fundamental question in planet formation theory (McBride & Gilmour 2004): what explains the fact that large scale migration did not happen in the Solar System? Or, in other words, assuming all planets form in a PPD around a low mass star (Nomura et al. 2016; van der Marel et al. 2018; Pérez et al. 2019), what difference would make migration more important in one case and less important in another (see discussion in Walsh et al. 2011)?

Integrating the migration process into a consistent model of planet formation is an extremely active and fast evolving field of research (a recent review of this important subject can be found in Raymond & Morbidelli 2020). In the case of the HJs, two migration mechanisms are accepted now as most probable (Dawson & Johnson 2018): (1) disk migration, where the planet forms beyond the ice-line and then migrates inward by loosing its orbit angular momentum to the PPD (see thorough reviews in Baruteau et al. 2014; Armitage 2020), and (2) high-eccentricity migration, according to which the planet first gains a high eccentricity through interactions with other planets, which makes it to pass very close to its star, where it looses its orbit angular momentum by tidal interactions (this is a more complicated process, involving different mechanisms; e.g., Rasio &. Ford 1996; Weidenschilling & Marzari 1996; Marzari & Weidenschilling 2002; Chatterjee et al. 2008; Nagasawa et al. 2008; Beaugé & Nesvorný 2012). However, what is not clear in these two models is, what importance must be put on the characteristics of the PPD, its mass, size, depth and composition?

According to PPD formation theory, there are two possible mass scenarios (Armitage 2020): the minimum mass model, between 0.01 to 0.02 M, which suggests that the PPD initial mass is only sufficient to explain the masses of the planets that formed within it, and the maximum mass model, which suggests the mass could have been much higher, close to 0.5 M. Consequently, more massive PPD (compared to the Solar System) might have either favored the formation of more massive planets (consistent with PPD observations, see Figure 2 and discussion in Raymond & Morbidelli 2020) or a larger number of planets. The problem is that this makes both migration mechanisms equally probable (also, the masses observed seem too low; also related to Figure 2 in Raymond & Morbidelli 2020). Another caveat is that the Solar System is a multiple planet system where migration on large scale did not happen.

In terms of angular momentum, the differences between the minimum and maximum mass model for the PPD might also be important. By definition, the angular momentum of a planet is given by the relation :

Jp=MpGM*ap(1-ep2), (1)

where Mp and M* are the masses of the planet and its host star, αp is the semi-major axis of the planet and ep its eccentricity. This suggests that within the maximum mass model more massive planets would also be expected to have higher orbital angular momentum (through their PPD) and, consequently, to have lost a larger amount of their angular momentum during large scale migration (ap0). This implies that the efficiency of the migration mechanism must increase with the mass of the planet (or its PPD). In principle, such requirement might be one way to distinguish which migration process is more realistic. However, the problem is bound to be more complicated. First, stars rotate much more slowly than expected assuming conservation of angular momentum during their formation . Second, defining the angular momentum of a planetary system as Jsys=J*+ΣJp where ∑Jp is the sum of the angular momentum of all the planets and J* the angular momentum of the host star (cf. Berget & Durrance 2010), the angular momentum of massive planets (even after migration, assuming ap0) will always dominate over the angular momentum of its host stars. That is, J*/ΣJp<1, and this is despite the enormous loss of angular momentum of the star during its formation. This implies that a sort of coupling must exist between the angular momentum of the stars and their planets through their PPDs. Understanding the nature of this coupling, therefore, is an important step in understanding how the PPD and the planets forming in it are connected to the formation of their stars. This, on the other hand, requires completing our information about the stars and the planets rotating around them.

In the case of the planets, the two most successful detection techniques, the radial velocity (RV) and transit (Tr) methods, yield estimates of the mass of a planet, Mp, and its radius, Rp, as well as the semi-major axis, αp, and the eccentricity of its orbit, ep. The first two parameters constrain their composition and formation process in the PPD, while the last two give information about their migration. By combining the four parameters we can also retrieve the angular momentum of the orbits of the planets (cf. equation 1). In the case of the stars the most important characteristics that can be derived from their spectra are the effective temperature, Teff, the surface gravity, log g, the metallicities, [M/H] or [Fe/H], and the rotational velocity, Vsini. The first two can be used in combination with their magnitudes and distances (using GAIA parallaxes) to determine their radii and masses which, taken in combination with the rotational velocity, yield the angular momentum (or spin) of the star, J*:

J*=γ*M*R*V*rot, (2)

where M*, R* and γ* are the star mass, radius and moment of inertia (which depends on the mass of the star; cf. Irwin 2015), and V*rot=Vsini/sini is the equatorial rotation velocity (where i is the inclination angle of the rotation axis relative to our line of sight).

To understand how the formation of planets is connected with the formation of their host stars, we must, consequently, make an effort to determine in parallel with the discovery of the former the physical characteristics of the latter. Present data banks for exoplanets (e.g., Kepler and now TESS, with 51 confirmed discoveries, and future surveys like PLATO)2 require follow-up observations and analysis for the host stars, which are usually done with large diameter telescopes equipped with high resolution spectrographs. However, for the brightest stars (TESS targets, for example, being 30-100 times brighter than KEPLER stars), the use of smaller diameter telescopes equipped with lower resolution spectrographs might be more efficient in acquiring the information. Moreover, although high resolution spectra is justified when one uses the standard spectral analysis method, which is based on modeling the equivalent width (EW) of spectral lines, this might not be necessary when one uses the synthetic spectral analysis (e.g., Valenti & Debra 2005), which consists in fitting observed spectra to grids of synthetic spectra with well determined physical characteristics that can be produced at different spectral resolutions. Another problem in using large aperture telescopes for host stars follow-up is that, since these telescopes are in high demand (for faint objects), data are collected on short duration runs by different groups using different techniques and codes (although the same analysis method), which introduces discrepancies between the results (Hinkel et al. 2014, 2016; Blanco-Cuaresma 2014; Jófre et al. 2017). This suggests that a follow-up using a dedicated telescope and applying only one method of analysis could produce more homegeneous data (one effort to homogenize data is the Stars With ExoplanETs CATalog or SWEET-Cat for short; Sousa et al. 2008). For these reasons we developed a new method based on stellar spectral analysis for data obtained with the TIGRE telescope (Telescopio Internacional de Guanajuato Robótico Espectroscópico) that is installed at our institution in Guanajuato.

TIGRE is a 1.2 m fully robotic telescope located at the La Luz Observatory (in central Mexico) at an altitude of 2,400 m; a more detailed description can be found in Schmitt et al. (2014). Its principal instrument is the fibre-fed echelle spectrograph HEROS (Heidelberg Extended Range Optical Spectrograph), which yields a spectral resolution R ≈ 20,000, covering a spectral range from 3800 Å to 8800 Å. The queue observing mode and automatic reduction pipeline already implemented for this telescope allow to optimize the observation and reduction process, producing highly homogeneous data rapidly and confidently. To optimize the analysis process, we developed a semi-automatic method that allows us to derive efficiently the most important physical characteristics of the stars: Teff, log𝑔, [M/H], [Fe/H], and 𝑉sin𝑖. This was done by applying the synthetic spectral fitting technique as offered by the code iSpec (Blanco-Cuaresma 2014), which was shown to yield results that are comparable to results in the literature obtained through different methods and codes (Blanco-Cuaresma 2019).

The goal of this first article is to explain our spectral analysis method based on iSpec and to compare results obtained by TIGRE with data taken from the literature. In an accompanying paper (Flor-Torres et al., hereinafter Paper II) we will present a preliminary study, based on our own observational results, about the coupling of the angular momentum of the exoplanets and their host stars.

2. Sample of host stars with exoplanets observed with TIGRE

Our initial target list for a pilot project was built from the revised compendium of confirmed exoplanets in the Exoplanet Orbit Database (hereinafter Exoplanets.org,3) selecting all stars with spectral types F, G or K, located on the main sequence (based on their luminosities and colors), and for which a confirmed planet with well determined mass, radius, and semi-major axis was reported. Note that we did not apply a restriction to single systems, since from the point of view of the angular momentum we verified that only the major planet of a system counts (like Jupiter in our solar system). To optimize our observation with TIGRE, we restricted further our target list by retaining only host stars that have a magnitude V ≤ 10.5, obtaining a much shorter list of 65 targets.

Our observed sample consists of 46 stars, hosts of 59 exoplanets, which were observed by TIGRE in queue mode. In Table 1 the stars observed are given a running number (Column 1) which is used to identify them in the different graphics. The V magnitude of each star and its distance as calculated from Gaia parallaxes are listed in Columns 3 and 4 respectively. Also shown are the exposure times, in Column 5, and the signal to noise ratio (S/N) in Column 6, as measured in the red part of the spectrum. The last column lists the main references found in the literature with data about the host stars and their planetary systems.

Table 1 Stars observed with the TIGRE 

Id. # Star Magnitude (V) Distance (pc) Exp. time (min) S/N Ref. (as found in exoplanets.org)
1 *KELT-6 10.3 242.4 97.1 54 Damasso et al. (2015)
2 *HD 219134 5.6 6.5 8.0 139 Motalebi et al. (2015)
3 *KEPLER-37 9.8 64.0 93.2 75 Batalha et al. (2013)
4 HD 46375 7.8 29.6 108.0 107 Marcy et al. (2000)
5 HD 75289 6.4 29.1 37.8 99 Udry et al. (2000)
6 HD 88133 8.0 73.8 116.0 94 Fischer et al. (2005)
7 HD 149143 7.9 73.4 108.0 93 Fischer et al. (2006); da Silva et al. (2006)
8 HAT-P-30 10.4 215.3 100.9 59 Johnson et al. (2011)
9 KELT-3 9.8 211.3 92.5 68 Pepper et al. (2013)
10 KEPLER-21 8.3 108.9 29.4 83 Borucki et al. (2011)
11 KELT-2A 8.7 134.6 54.3 95 Beatty et al. (2012)
12 HD86081 8.7 104.2 61.4 100 Johnson et al. (2006)
13 WASP-74 9.8 149.8 96.5 73 Hellier et al. (2015)
14 HD 149026 8.1 76.0 37.4 98 Sato et al. (2005)
15 HD 209458 7.6 48.4 40.0 98 Henry et al. (2000); Charbonneau et al. (2000)
16 BD-10 3166 10.0 84.6 100.8 72 Butler et al. (2000)
17 HD 189733 7.6 19.8 33.1 102 Bouchy et al. (2005)
18 HD 97658 7.7 21.6 35.0 123 Howard et al. (2011)
19 HAT-P-7 10.5 344.5 43.5 32 Pál et al. (2008)
20 KELT-7 8.5 137.2 47.2 93 Bieryla et al. (2015)
21 HAT-P-14 10.0 224.1 84.0 57 Torres et al. (2010)
22 WASP-14 9.7 162.8 74.6 66 Joshi et al. (2009)
23 HAT-P-2 8.7 128.2 70.0 69 Bakos et al. (2007)
24 WASP-38 9.4 136.8 75.8 82 Barros et al. (2011)
25 HD 118203 8.1 92.5 41.5 92 da Silva et al. (2006)
26 HD 2638 9.4 55.0 104.6 82 Moutou et al. (2005)
27 WASP-13 10.4 229.0 123.7 51 Skillen et al. (2009)
28 WASP-34 10.3 132.6 136.8 62 Smalley et al. (2011)
29 WASP-82 10.1 277.8 98.1 51 West et al. (2016)
30 HD17156 8.2 78.3 46.3 98 Fischer et al. (2007)
31 XO-3 9.9 214.3 70.8 60 Johns-Krull et al. (2008)
32 HD 33283 8.0 90.1 53.4 101 Johnson et al. (2006)
33 HD 217014 5.5 15.5 40.0 254 Mayor & Queloz (1995)
34 HD 115383 5.2 17.5 4.0 105 Kuzuhara et al. (2013)
35 HAT-P-6 10.5 277.5 125.0 49 Noyes et al. (2008)
36 *HD 75732 6.0 12.6 28.7 141 Marcy et al. (2002)
37 HD 120136 4.5 15.7 9.3 174 Butler et al. (2000)
38 WASP-76 9.5 195.3 91.1 73 West et al. (2016)
39 Hn-Peg 6.0 18.1 8.0 99 Luhman et al. (2007)
40 WASP-8 9.9 90.2 150.0 81 Queloz et al. (2010)
41 WASP-69 9.9 50.0 90.0 76 Anderson et al. (2014)
42 HAT-P-34 10.4 251.1 105.0 56 Bakos et al. (2012)
43 HAT-P-1 9.9 159.7 75.0 60 Bakos et al. (2007)
44 WASP-94 A 10.1 212.5 105.0 58 Neveu-VanMalle et al. (2014)
45 WASP-111 10.3 300.5 90.0 58 Anderson et al. (2014)
46 HAT-P-8 10.4 212.8 150.0 74 Latham et al. (2009)

An * in front of the name of the star identifies multiple planetary systems

The HEROS spectrograph on TIGRE is coupled to two ANDOR CCDs, cooled by thermocouple (Peltier cooling to -100 C): blue iKon-L camera DZ936N-BBB and red iKon-L camera DZ936N-BV. This yields for each star two spectra, one in the blue, covering a spectral range from 3800 Å to 5750 Å, and one in the red, covering a spectral range from 5850 Å to 8750 Å. All the data were automatically reduced by the TIGRE/HEROS standard pipeline, which applies automatically all the necessary steps to extract Echelle spectra (Hempelmann et al. 2016; Mittag et al. 2016): bias subtraction, flat fielding, cosmic ray correction, order definition and extraction and wavelength calibration, which was carried out by means of Th-Ar lamp spectra taken at the beginning and end of each night. Finally, we applied a barycentric correction and as a final reduction step, corrected each spectrum for telluric lines using the code developed by Smette et al. (2015). After verification of the results of the reduction process, we decided to concentrate our spectral analysis only on the red part of the spectra, where the S/N is higher.

In Figure 1 we show the S/N obtained as a function of the exposure time. For each star the total exposure time during observation was adjusted to reach S/N ≥ 60. Note that this result only depends on the telescope diameter, the fiber transmission, the spectrograph resolution (we used R = 20,000, but the resolution is adjustable in iSpec) and the photometric conditions (explaining most of the variance).The average exposure time was 74 s for an average S/N ≈ 87 , which makes observation with a very efficient process.

Fig. 1 S/N as a function of exposure time for our sample, limited to stars with magnitude limit V≤ 10.5. Note that the exposure time was adjusted to reach S/N ≥ 60 in less than two hours. 

To determine how faint a follow-up with TIGRE could be done efficiently, we traced in Figure 2 an exponential growth curve based on our data, determining the S/N expected in one hour for stars with different magnitudes. One can see that a star with 10.5 mag in V would be expected to have a S/N near 30 (or 60 in 2 hours). The lowest we could go would be S/N ≈10 which would be reached in one hour for a 12.5 mag star (or 2 hours for a 13 mag star). Since it is not clear how low the S/N of a star could be to be efficiently analysed using the synthetic-spectra method, we judged safer to adopt a limit S/N of 60, which can be reached within two hours using TIGRE. This justifies the magnitude limit, V ≤ 10.5, adopted for this pilot project. Our observations suggest that a 1.2 m telescope could contribute significantly to the follow-up of exoplanet surveys like TESS, searching for small rocky planets around bright stars (stars much brighter than stars), and in the near future PLATO, which will search for Earth-like planets in the habitable zones of one million nearby Solar type stars.

Fig. 2 Exponential growth curve giving the S/N expected after one hour exposure time for stars with different magnitudes. 

3. Spectral analysis using iSpec

Our spectral analysis was developed using the synthetic spectral fitting technique offered by the code iSpec (version 2016.11.18; Blanco-Cuaresma 2014, 2019). In brief, this technique consists in comparing an observed spectrum with synthetic spectra interpolated from pre-computed grids, calculated using different radiative transfer codes, and applying a least-squares minimization algorithm to converge towards the closest approximation possible. In Figure 3 we show one example of a synthetic spectral fit for the star HD 46375. The fit has a rms 0.0319, which is relatively good considering HEROS intermediate resolution (Piskunov & Valenti 2017). Due to the low resolution of our spectra we can fit at the same time in a homogeneous manner the intensity and spectral profiles of more than 100 lines (compared to a few 10s at high resolution; e.g., Valenti & Debra 2005). The best fit then allows to determine five important atmospheric parameters: i.e., the effective temperature, Teff, the surface gravity, logg, two indexes of metallicities, [M/H] and [Fe/H], and the rotational velocity, Vsini.

Fig. 3 Example of the result for the synthetic spectral fitting method in iSpec. The star is HD 46375, the observed spectrum is shown in blue and the fitted spectrum in red, with a rms of 0.0319. The color figure can be viewed online. 

To optimize our analysis a crucial step of our method consisted in applying iSpec to a TIGRE spectrum from the Sun (as reflected by the Moon). Our main goal was to determine a subset of spectral lines and segments that best reproduced the physical characteristics of our star. Although this step is time consuming because each line and segment has to be tested incrementally by running iSpec, once these lines and segments are established, the analysis of stars becomes straightforward and efficient, the full process taking only a few minutes to converge on a modern desktop computer. Starting with the whole line-list available in the VALD database (Kupka et al. 1999, 2011), we kept only 122 lines in the red for which we defined specific segments in Table 1 of Appendix A. As we already verified in Eisner et al. (2020), these lines and segments can also be used in iSpec as a standard basis for observations obtained with different telescopes and (once adjusted for the resolution) other spectrographs.

Our initial analysis of the Sun also allowed us to decide which solar abundance, atmospheric model and radiative transfer code were optimal. We adopted the solar abundance of Asplund et al. (2009), the ATLAS atmospheric model of and the radiative transfer code SPECTRUM of . Another parameter that turned out to be important using iSpec is a correction for limb darkening, which we fixed to a value of 0.6 (Hestroffer & Magnan 1998; Blanco-Cuaresma 2019).

After working out the analysis of the Sun, we found an unexpected difficulty in obtaining the rotation velocity, Vsini, for our stars. The problem comes from the fact that in low mass stars the turbulence velocity Vmic and Vmac have values comparable to Vsini (Doyle et al. 2014), and there is consequently no fail-proof recipe how to “constrain” these velocities using the synthetic method. One way to approach this problem (following different researchers in the field) is to adopt ad hoc values based on theory or observation (Gray 1984a,b; Fischer & Valenti 2005; Bruntt et al. 2010; Tsantaki et al. 2014; Doyle et al. 2014). For our analysis, we decided to adopt empirical values. For Vmac we used the relation (Doyle et al. 2014):

Vmac=a+bΔT+cΔT2-2.00(logg-4.44), (3)

where ΔT=(Teff - 5777), α = 3.21, b = 2.33 x 10-3 and c = 2.00 x 10-6. For Vmic we used the relation (Tsantaki et al. 2014):

Vmic=6.932×10-4Teff-0.348logg-1.437. (4)

Note that neither authors give uncertainties on these values. However, suggest generic uncertainties of the order of ± 0.27 km/s and ± 0.15 for Vmac and Vmic respectively, which we adopted for our study.

In Figure 4 we show the final values of Vmac obtained in our analysis. Traced over the data, we draw the different relations proposed in the literature to fix this parameter. At high temperatures (Teff > 5800 K), one can see that our values for 𝑉 𝑚𝑎𝑐 are well above the upper limit determined by Valenti & Fischer (2005), while at low temperatures, the values are well above the lower limit determined by Bruntt et al. (2010). In general, our results for Vmac are consistent with the values expected based on the relation proposed by Gray (1984b).

Fig. 4 Values of Vmac adopted for our analysis with iSpec as a function of our results for Teff

Our final result for the Sun is shown in Table 2. These values were obtained after only ten iterations, using the parameters of the Sun as initial guess and fixing Vmac and Vmic using equation 3 and equation 4. For comparison, we also included in Table 2 the values adopted for the Gaia Benchmark stars. Although our best fit reproduces well the physical characteristics of the Sun, the uncertainty estimated by for 𝑉sin𝑖 is relatively high. But this, as we already explained, is expected considering the problem related to Vmic and Vmac. The different solutions (as shown in Figure 4) to this problem might explain, for example, why the macro turbulence we used for the Sun is lower than what was used by Gaia. In Doyle et al. (2014), the authors already noted a similar difference, by comparing the values they obtained by their relation with results reported by Fischer & Valenti (2005), where the Vmac were systematically higher by as much as 0.54km s-1. However, adding this difference (as a systematic correction) to bring our result for Vmac closer to the value proposed in the Gaia Benchmark, did not lower the uncertainties on Vsini obtained with iSpec. Therefore, considering that our method easily reproduces the value of Vsini for the Sun, we judged more realistic to keep a high uncertainty on this parameter. Besides, the question is possibly more complex, considering the uncertainty on the existence of a J - M relation, J*Mα, for low mass stars (Herbst et al. 2007) and taking into account that Vsini might also depend on the age of the star (that is, decreasing with the age; Kraft 1967; Wilson 1963; Skumanich 1972).

Table 2 Results for the solar spectrum using ISPEC 

Char. iSpec Sun*
Teff 5571 ± 30 K 5571 K
log g 4:44 ± 0:04 dex 4:44 dex
[M/H] 0:00 ± 0:03 0
[Fe/H] 0:00 ± 0:03 0
V sin i 1:60 ± 1:45 km/s 1:60 km/s
Vmic 1:02 km/s 1:07 km/s
Vmac 3:19 km/s 4:21 km/s
Rms of fit 0:0289

*Gaia benchmark Stars values(Blanco-Cuaresma 2019).

For the analysis of the stars, our semi-automatic method can be summarized in the following way. We first run iSpec using the parameters of the Sun as initial input. This implies calculating Vmac and Vmic using equation 3 and equation 4, keeping these values fixed and leaving all the other parameters free. The results of the first run give us new values of Teff and logg based on which we calculate new initial values for Vmac and Vmic before running iSpec a second time.

To verify our solutions, for each star we use the final value of Teff to calculate its mass and radius (first we get the mass, then the corresponding radius) using the mass-luminosity relation for stars with masses between 0.43 M and 2 M (Wang & Zhong 2018):

MM=LL1/4=TeffTRR1/2, (5)

where L is the bolometric luminosity as determined from its magnitude in V and its distance calculated from Gaia in Table 1. Then, we verify that the value of logg given by iSpec is consistent with the mass and radius obtained using the relation (equation 7 in Valenti & Debra 2005):

log(M/M)=log(g*)+2log(R/R)-4.437. (6)

In general, we obtained consistent values for logg, within the generic errors suggested by Doyle et al. (2014). However, for eight stars, we found discrepant masses, the masses obtained using equation 6 being higher than the masses using equation 5. To solve this problem we found it important to better constrain the initial value of logg before running iSpec a second time. The reason for this constraint is physically clear, since, as shown by equation 5 and equation 6, logg is coupled to Teff. In Valenti & Debra (2005), for example, the authors took into account this coupling by first fixing the initial value of Teff related to the B- V color of the star, then used a generic logg consistent with this temperature. In our case we decided to use as initial parameters for the second run the value of Teff obtained from the first run with iSpec (which uses the values of the Sun as first guesses) and to use as second guess the value of logg given by equation 6 that makes the two masses consistent. This also implies recalculating Vmac and Vmic for these new values, which, as before, are kept fixed running iSpec. The unique consequence of adding this constraint for the eight stars with discrepant masses was to lower the final values of their log(g), all the other parameters being equal. For each star, our method requires only two runs of ten iterations each, which amounts to about 30 minutes CPU time on a fast desktop computer. This makes our analysis process quite efficient.

4.Results: characterization of the host stars of exoplanets observed with TIGRE

Our measurements for the physical parameters of the host stars as determined with our semi-automatic method are presented in Table 3. Note that for the metallicities, [M/H] and [Fe/H], an extra correction was needed following Valenti & Debra (2005), to eliminate spurious abundance trends (see their explanations in § 6.4). This correction is based on the assumption that the ratio of one elemental abundance to another must not vary systematically with the temperature. The correction then is simple: it consists in tracing the metallicities as a function of Teff, fitting a second order relation, then subtracting this spurious relation from the data. All the uncertainties reported in Table 3 were calculated by , while the errors of the radii and masses are the quadratic sums of the uncertainties of the parameters used to calculate these values (see § 7.2 in Valenti & Debra 2005). As explained Valenti & Debra (2005) and in Piskunov & Valenti (2017) the uncertainties estimated by the algorithms that produce the synthetic spectra and fit them to the observed spectra are usually undetermined, as compared to the random errors calculated from the measurements of multiple observations of the stars (§ 6.3 in Valenti & Debra 2005). Unfortunately, multiple observations were not programmed for our stars and we have only 4 stars in our study (17, 19, 23 and 46) that were observed more than once (four times for three and six times for the fourth one). This means that only a rough estimate of the random error can be obtained for our pilot-survey by calculating for each of these stars the standard deviations of the parameters measured applying the same spectral analysis as for the other stars. In table 4 we compare our mean uncertainties as obtained with iSpec the mean of the standard deviations for the multiply observed stars in our sample. Except for 𝑉sin𝑖, the mean empirical errors are much larger than the iSpec values. In particular, our empirical errors are larger than the empirical uncertainties calculated by Valenti & Debra (Figure 9 in 2005), being comparable to their 2 sigma probabilities (the values in the table correspond to 1 sigma, the threshold that includes 68.3% of their error measurements).

Table 3 Physical parameters of the host stars of exoplanets in our sample, as determined with ISPEC 

No Name o star Teff (K) ∆Teff (k) log g ∆log g [M/H] ∆[M/H] [Fe/H] ∆[Fe/H] V sin i ∆V sin i Vmic Vmac rms R* R ∆R* R M* M ∆M* M
1 KELT-6 6176 24 4.03 0.05 −0.38 0.02 −0.14 0.03 6.52 0.82 1.44 5.28 0.0292 1.71 0.20 1.22 0.20
2 HD 219134 5209 13 4.90 0.00 0.00 0.02 0.02 0.01 7.09 0.30 0.47 1.61 0.0318 0.54 0.09 0.77 0.09
3 KEPLER-37 5520 19 4.50 0.04 −0.40 0.02 −0.28 0.02 6.62 0.50 0.82 2.62 0.0317 0.71 0.15 0.88 0.15
4 HD 46375 5345 22 4.47 0.04 −0.05 0.01 0.11 0.01 2.01 0.73 0.71 2.52 0.0319 0.83 0.01 0.88 0.02
5 HD 75289 6196 23 4.16 0.06 0.16 0.02 0.42 0.02 4.11 0.56 1.41 5.10 0.0291 1.27 0.01 1.14 0.03
6 HD 88133 5582 16 4.05 0.03 0.15 0.01 0.34 0.01 1.98 0.76 1.02 3.61 0.0344 1.80 0.01 1.12 0.02
7 HD 149143 6067 20 4.36 0.04 0.17 0.02 0.48 0.02 3.53 0.61 1.25 4.22 0.0316 1.64 0.10 1.19 0.10
8 HAT-P-30 6177 30 3.81 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.15 0.03 8.88 0.60 1.52 5.72 0.0324 1.51 0.19 1.19 0.19
9 KELT-3 6404 26 4.20 0.05 0.02 0.03 0.24 0.02 8.51 0.57 1.54 5.93 0.0294 1.77 0.16 1.28 0.16
10 KEPLER-21 6256 31 4.02 0.06 −0.07 0.03 0.11 0.03 7.38 0.57 1.50 5.63 0.0317 1.96 0.10 1.28 0.10
11 KELT-2A 6164 22 3.74 0.05 −0.04 0.03 0.19 0.02 7.28 0.51 1.53 5.81 0.0315 2.01 0.10 1.27 0.10
12 HD86081 6015 19 3.94 0.06 0.14 0.02 0.38 0.02 4.01 0.57 1.36 4.88 0.0314 1.63 0.13 1.18 0.13
13 WASP-74 5727 14 3.70 0.03 0.14 0.02 0.22 0.02 8.24 0.38 1.25 4.58 0.0341 1.57 0.15 1.11 0.16
14 HD 149026 6096 14 4.06 0.02 0.25 0.02 0.38 0.02 5.28 0.49 1.38 4.92 0.0302 1.51 0.10 1.17 0.10
15 HD 209458 5988 17 4.17 0.06 −0.22 0.03 −0.01 0.02 2.96 0.86 1.26 4.33 0.0282 1.25 0.10 1.10 0.10
16 BD-10 3166 5578 23 4.64 0.04 0.22 0.01 0.39 0.02 6.88 0.38 0.82 2.43 0.0361 0.82 0.17 0.92 0.17
17 HD 189733 5374 18 4.89 0.04 −0.04 0.01 0.09 0.01 2.75 0.60 0.59 1.70 0.0287 0.60 0.01 0.82 0.02
18 HD 97658 5468 20 4.68 0.04 −0.39 0.01 −0.17 0.01 1.87 0.85 0.72 2.20 0.0320 0.62 0.01 0.84 0.02
19 HAT-P-7 6270 46 3.95 0.12 −0.01 0.07 0.43 0.05 5.70 1.44 1.53 5.82 0.0312 2.21 0.19 1.32 0.20
20 KELT-7 6508 38 3.95 0.13 −0.19 0.01 0.15 0.04 45.2 1.39 1.70 6.96 0.0269 2.01 0.15 1.34 0.17
21 HAT-P-14 6490 35 4.12 0.07 −0.11 0.04 0.09 0.03 8.86 0.65 1.63 6.53 0.0293 1.69 0.15 1.28 0.16
22 WASP-14 6195 24 3.60 0.04 −0.33 0.03 −0.23 0.03 1.47 2.11 1.60 6.21 0.0298 1.50 0.15 1.19 0.15
23 HAT-P-2 6439 24 4.05 0.05 0.15 0.03 0.29 0.03 20.66 0.58 1.62 6.41 0.0254 1.79 0.10 1.29 0.10
24 WASP-38 6178 18 3.95 0.04 −010 0.03 0.15 0.02 7.47 0.54 1.47 5.44 0.0301 1.49 0.13 1.18 0.13
25 HD 118203 5847 31 4.06 0.06 0.04 0.01 0.19 0.02 4.16 0.58 1.20 4.14 0.0321 2.04 0.10 1.21 0.10
26 HD 2638 5564 18 4.90 0.00 0.14 0.02 0.38 0.02 3.30 0.62 0.71 1.88 0.0355 0.72 0.13 0.89 0.13
27 WASP-13 6025 29 3.89 0.03 −0.01 0.03 0.12 0.03 2.35 1.30 1.39 5.01 0.0344 1.62 0.20 1.18 0.20
28 WASP-34 5771 27 4.44 0.04 −0.31 0.03 0.00 0.03 1.60 1.39 1.02 3.20 0.0326 1.08 0.20 1.02 0.20
29 WASP-82 6257 28 3.96 0.08 −0.05 0.04 0.22 0.03 2.86 1.23 1.52 5.75 0.0331 2.16 0.17 1.31 0.18
30 HD17156 5985 22 4.10 0.05 −0.06 0.01 0.09 0.02 3.02 0.78 1.29 4.46 0.0303 1.58 0.10 1.16 0.10
31 XO-3 6281 30 4.16 0.10 −0.12 0.04 −0.19 0.03 20.2 0.73 1.47 5.45 0.0270 1.83 0.16 1.27 0.16
32 HD 33283 5877 16 3.81 0.03 0.05 0.02 0.32 0.02 4.39 0.47 1.31 4.72 0.0320 1.99 0.09 1.21 0.09
33 HD 217014 5755 12 4.43 0.03 −0.30 0.01 −0.01 0.02 0.40 1.43 1.01 3.18 0.0312 1.16 0.19 1.04 0.19
34 HD 115383 5891 19 4.19 0.04 −0.16 0.02 0.22 0.02 8.11 0.40 1.19 4.00 0.0285 1.41 0.01 1.11 0.02
35 HAT-P-6 6442 34 4.05 0.05 0.04 0.02 −0.10 0.03 11.7 0.71 1.62 6.43 0.0440 1.70 0.17 1.28 0.18
36 HD 75732 5548 17 4.89 0.03 0.19 0.01 0.38 0.01 0.17 1.61 0.71 1.88 0.0338 0.80 0.19 0.91 0.19
37 HD 120136 6210 17 3.79 0.04 0.20 0.02 0.20 0.02 15.14 0.36 1.55 5.89 0.0292 1.61 0.19 1.21 0.19
38 WASP-76 6133 21 3.90 0.04 0.10 0.02 0.40 0.02 2.24 1.00 1.46 5.37 0.0301 2.03 0.16 1.27 0.16
39 HN-PEG 5853 18 4.41 0.04 −0.37 0.02 0.03 0.02 10.02 0.41 1.09 3.46 0.0337 1.03 0.01 1.02 0.02
40 WASP-8 5735 55 4.62 0.13 0.10 0.02 0.39 0.04 6.45 1.07 0.93 2.76 0.0308 0.89 0.19 0.97 0.20
41 WASP-69 5197 15 4.90 0.00 0.22 0.01 0.30 0.01 1.18 1.07 0.46 1.61 0.0360 0.58 0.15 0.78 0.15
42 HAT-P-34 6494 33 4.22 0.07 0.14 0.04 0.38 0.04 25.32 0.80 1.60 6.35 0.0287 1.57 0.19 1.26 0.19
43 HAT-P-1 6142 24 4.15 0.06 0.14 0.02 0.21 0.03 5.65 0.66 1.38 4.91 0.0330 1.41 0.10 1.16 0.10
44 WASP-94A 5988 23 3.76 0.04 0.17 0.03 0.38 0.02 5.55 0.60 1.41 5.15 0.0338 1.80 0.17 1.20 0.18
45 WASP-111 6312 32 3.94 0.08 0.05 0.04 0.30 0.03 11.57 0.54 1.57 6.03 0.0308 2.12 0.18 1.32 0.18
46 HAT-P-8 6009 60 4.06 0.09 0.15 0.05 −0.12 0.07 13.68 1.09 1.32 4.62 0.0365 1.55 0.16 0.16 0.16

Table 4 Comparison of errors 

Errors Teff logg [Fe/H] Vsini
(K) (dex) (dex) (km/s)
Standard deviations 73 0.14 0.08 0.8
iSpec 25 0.05 0.02 0.8
Valenti & Fischer 44 0.06 0.03 0.5
Exoplanets.org 66 0.06 0.07 0.7
SWEET-Cat 52 0.10 0.04

Comparing with the Exoplanets.org and SWEET.cat mean uncertainties, our mean errors (standard deviations of multiple stars) are slightly larger, although still comparable to those reported in these studies. Although preliminary, this result is important as it suggests that our results based on analysis of low resolution spectra (R ≈ 20,000 ) are in good agreement with results obtained using higher resolution spectra (R higher than 50,000).

Another way to verify the consistency of our data is to compare our results with those published in Exoplanets.org (on the left in Figure 5) and in (on the right). Taken as a whole, our results seem compatible with the data reported in these two catalogs (note that the uncertainties are those of iSpec), although there are also slight notable differences. In Figure 5a, our values for Teff are slightly higher below 5800 K than the values reported by Exoplanets.org and SWEET-Cat. However, above 6000 K our temperatures are comparable with those in Exoplanets.org, while clearly lower compared to SWEET-Cat. The largest difference between our results and those of the two other surveys is for logg. Compared with Exoplanets.org (Figure 5c), our values for log are comparable within the range 4-4.7 dex, only slightly underestimated. Above 4.7 dex, our values tend to be overestimated while below 4 dex they are underestimated. These differences are amplified comparing with in Figure 5d. Once again, however, we must conclude that these differences already existed comparing Exoplanets.org with . Despite the above differences, our metallicities in Figure 5e and Figure5f are comparable with those published both by Exoplanets.org and SWEET-Cat. Once again, our results seem more similar to the former than to the latter.

Fig. .5 Comparison of our results with those in Exoplanets.org (left) and SWEET-Cat (right): a) and b) Teff ; c) and d) log g; e) and f) [Fe=H]; g) V sin i; h) the mass of the stars, M*, with data for Exoplanets.org included. 

The most important comparison for the purpose of our survey is for Vsini in Figure 5g. Unfortunately, we can only compare with Exoplanets.org, since SWEET-Cat did not publish their results. What we find is a very good agreement, with only a slight trend for our values to be higher. This trend is most probably due to our lower resolution and to the different way we determined Vmic and Vmac (more about that will be said later). In Figure 5h we compare the masses of the stars to those reported by SWEET-Cat. This time we observe a much better consistency. Note that we have also included the values given by Exoplanets.org (as open circles). In general, our masses show a weak trend to be smaller, although well within the uncertainties.

To quantify the differences between our values and those reported in Exoplanets.org and we compare in Table 5 the medians and means (note that since the numbers of stars in the comparisons vary the means and medians are not the same). In both cases, we also determined if the differences were statistically significant, using non-parametric Mann-Whitney tests (Dalgaard 2008). The last two columns in Table 5 report the of the tests and the level of significance of the differences (at a level of confidence of 95%). As one can see, the only parameter distributions that are significantly different are the surface gravity, which is slightly lower in our work than in Exoplanets.org and SWEET-Cat. The statistical test also confirms that the difference is more significant comparing our data with SWEET-Cat than with Exoplanets.org (0.0008 instead of 0.0195). Considered as a whole, therefore, these tests suggest that our results are quite comparable with those reported in the literature.

Table 5 Comparision with literature 

TIGRE (45 stars) Exoplanets p-value s.l.
Parameter Units Median Mean Median Mean
Teff (K) 6025 5975 6095 5952 0.7679 ns
logg 4.06 4.18 4.26 4.28 0.0195 *
[Fe/H] 0.07 0.12 0.20 0.18 0.1638 ns
Vsini (km/s) 5.55 7.39 4.10 6.92 0.2732 ns
M* (ecuacion) 1.18 1.13 1.22 1.19 0.1010 ns
R* (ecuacion) 1.57 1.47 1.34 1.36 0.0868 ns
p-value s.l.
(l)3-4(l)6-7 Parameter Units Median Mean Median Mean
Teff (K) 6046 5977 6133 6036 0.2936 ns
logg 4.06 4.18 4.33 4.34 0.0008 ***
[Fe/H] 0.08 0.12 0.20 0.17 0.1973 ns
M* (ecuacion) 1.18 1.13 1.24 1.18 0.0700 ns

As we mentioned before, as the temperature of the stars goes down, Vmic and Vmac become comparable to Vsini and thus it is more complicated to separate one from the others. In the Valenti & Debra (2005) spectral synthesis analysis, the authors recognized this problem stating, in particular, that, “...adopting a global macroturbulence relationship should yield more accurate results than solving for Vmac in each individual spectrum.” To determine such relation they fixed Vsini = 0, obtaining the maximum values Vmac could have at different temperatures. Note that these authors did not report any dependence on the spectral resolution, although they used spectra with R between 50,000 and almost 100,000. The maximum relation they deduced can be seen in Figure 4. According to these authors, below Teff = 5800 K Vsini becomes negligible, and what we measure then must be the “real” Vmac. However, this conclusion contradicts what was expected based on the semi-empirical relation established by Gray (1984b) and later the minimum relation for Vmac obtained by Bruntt et al. (2010) by line modeling (the two relations can also be seen in Figure 4). These results suggest that applying the right macro (and micro) turbulence relationship one could obtain a value of Vsini0 below Teff = 5800 K. In fact, in our analysis of the Sun, we did reproduce the value of Vsini, using the relations for Vmic obtained by Tsantaki et al. (2014) and Vmac determined by Doyle et al. (2014), both depending not only on Teff but also on logg, and where Vsini < Vmac . The question then is how low can Vsini be compared to Vmac and still be distinguishable by iSpec?

In Figure 6a, we compare Vsini with the ratio Vsini/V mac . What we observe is that below Vsini = 4 km/s the ratio is lower than one. As one can see in Figure 4, a value of Vmac = 4 km/s (Vsini/Vmac = 1) corresponds to Teff ≈ 5800 K. Therefore, our results are at the same time consistent with the conclusion of Valenti & Debra (2005), since below Teff = 5800 K Vsini is lower than Vmac, and consistent with Gray (1984a), Bruntt et al. (2010) and Doyle et al. (2014), since Vsini0. But how low could a value of Vsini below Vmac be? We already answered this question in Figure 5g where we compared our values of Vsini with the values reported by Exoplanets.org. To get a better view, in Figure 6b we zoom in on values of Vsini ≤ 5 km/s. Except for three stars, 22, 33 and 36, with Vsini/Vmac < 0.4, all the other stars have Vsini comparable to the values reported in Exoplanets.org (in fact, two of the stars, 4 and 16, have higher values). In Figure 6a note that the iSpec uncertainty increases as Vsini goes down. As a consequence, the possible values for stars 22, 33 and 36 include zero. However, could stars with Vsini = 0 exist physically? Considering that the loss of angular momentum plays an important role in the formation of stars, this would seem difficult to explain (note that we did obtained Vsini = 0 for some stars in our initial list, but they were not included in our study). Since the study the problem seems clear: how can we measure the rotation of a star where Vmac is as high or even higher than Vsini? It seems that the best approach is to assume an a priori global relation and to see what comes out from the residual (Gray 1984a,b; Fischer & Valenti 2005; Bruntt et al. 2010; Tsantaki et al. 2014; Doyle et al. 2014). However, to stay safe, due to their higher uncertainties we should not consider stars 22, 33 and 36 in our statistical analysis for Vsin i.

Fig. 6 a) The ratio Vsini /Vmac as a function of. Below Vsini = 4 the ratios are lower than 1. Three stars, 33, 36 and 22 have have values with uncertainties that include zero. b) Zoom of the region in Figure 5g with Vsini < 5 km/s. 

Considering the results above, one expects the rotation to decrease with the temperature, but still be above zero for cool stars. Moreover, since and have found relations for Vmic and V mac that depend not only on Teff but also on on logg, we might expect a similar relation for Vsini, Teff and logg. In Figure 7, we show the diagram of Vsini and Teff for our stars. The dependence on log is shown by the gray-scale bar. In Figure 7, we also traced over our data the bi-exponential relation we obtained, together with the interval of confidence (in gray) and the prediction interval (dashed curves), which takes into account the uncertainty of each measurement. The final relation we obtained is the following:

Vsinikm/s=exp[ ATeff1000K)+Blogg-C ], (7)

where A = 2.20 ± 0.36, B = 0.30 ± 0.46 and C = 12.91 ± 3.59, and which has a multiple correlation coefficient of r2 = 0.6329. Except for stars 2, 3, 13 and 16, and the three stars with highest uncertainties (22, 33, and 36; not considered in this relation) all our data fit well inside the prediction interval.

Fig. 7 Exponential relation between the rotational velocity, the temperature and the surface gravity for the 46 stars in our sample. The black triangle represents the Sun. The gray area corresponds to the interval of confidence and the dashed curves delimit the prediction interval. 

Note that in order to obtain the highest correlation coefficient possible, 8 stars suspected to have peculiarly high rotation for their temperature were considered as outliers. They are, from right to left in Figure 7: 2, 3, 16, 13, 40, 39, 46 and 37. Different reasons were explored that could explain why these stars would be outliers. One is the age of the stars (e.g., Stauffer & Hartman 1986), younger stars rotating faster than older stars (see Figure 1.6 in Tassoul 2000). In Tassoul (2000) it was also shown that young stars trace the same relation of Vsini with Teff as old stars, only with higher velocities, forming an upper sequence (or upper envelope). This could be what we see in Figure 7. However, in Figure 8 the HR diagram for our stars compared to Hipparchos stars suggests that, except for three stars with slightly higher luminosity for their temperature (6, 25 and 32; none of these stars forming the envelope) all of the stars more luminous than the Sun are clearly on the main sequence. This eliminates the young age hypothesis. Another explanation could be peculiar surface activity. Since more than one phenomenon can cause such activities, the expected effect would be pure random dispersion. Checking the literature for each of the stars in our sample we did find 8 stars with reported peculiarities: 2, 3, 17, 26, 33, 37, 39 and 46. The type of peculiarities encountered included, “Flare star”, “Rotationally variable”, “Variable BY DRa”, and “Double or Multiple star”. Of these “active” stars only five in Figure 7 have a higher Vsini for their temperature: 2, 3, 37, 39 and 46. This leaves three stars (13, 16 and 40) with unexplained, relatively high Vsini values. In fact, checking their Vmac we found these stars have lower values than stars with comparable temperatures. However, in our various attempts to get the higher highest correlation coefficient possible, we judged better to keep them as outliers.

Fig.8. HRdiagram of our 46 stars, overlaid on the main sequence of Hipparchos stars. 

To verify our relation, in Figure 9 we traced it over the distribution of the rotational velocities and temperatures of the stars that were in our initial sample based on Exoplanets.org. As one can see, except for a few stars below Teff = 5500 K, with higher velocities, and stars below Teff = 5500 K, with lower velocities (some with Vsini = 0, the majority of the stars in this sample fall well between the prediction interval of our empirical relation. This result suggests that the decrease in angular momentum of low mass stars is a non-aleatory phenomenon, most probably reflecting the action of one specific mechanism, like, for example, magnetic braking or stellar wind (Wolff & Simon 1997; Tassoul 2000; Uzdensky et al. 2002). An exciting possibility, however, could be that this relation somehow is coupled to the formation of planets. Although this hypothesis proposed in the late 1960s was rapidly rejected, since no planet outside the Solar System was known at the time, the discovery of exoplanets allows us today to test this idea anew (e.g., Berget & Durrance 2010). This will be the subject of Paper II, in search of a connection between the formation of stars and planets.

Fig. 9 Data as found in Exoplanets.org. 

5. Conclusions

In this study we have shown that our method of analysis developed for the TIGRE telescope using iSpec on intermediate Echelle resolution spectra yields results about the physical characteristics of stars hosting exoplanets that are comparable to those obtained using bigger telescopes and standard spectra analysis methods with high resolution spectra. Our results show that TIGRE can provide a helpful contribution in the follow-up of exoplanet surveys around bright stars, like TESS and PLATO. Such follow-up studies are essential in order to understand how the formation of planets is connected to the formation of their host stars (Eisner et al. 2020).

Acknowledgements

We like to thank an anonymous referee for a careful revision of our results and for comments and suggestions that helped us to improve our work. would like to thank the CONACyT for its support through grant CVU 555458. She also acknowledges CONACyT for travel support (bilateral Conacyt-DFG projects 192334, 207772, and 278156), as well as the Universidad de Guanajuato (Dirección de Apoyo a la Investigación y al Posgrado, DAIP, and Campus Guanajuato) for support given for conference participation and international collaborations. L. M. F. T. also thanks the time request committee of the TIGRE for granting her the observations and the whole observing team for their support in getting the data that were used in this study. More personally, she thanks Sebastian Kohl for his help with MOLECFIT. This research has made use of the Exoplanet Orbit Database, the Exoplanet Data Explorer at exoplanets.org (Han et al. 2014), the exoplanets.eu (Schneider et al. 2011) and the NASA’s Astrophysics Data System.

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APPENDIX

LIST OF SPECTRAL LINES AND SEGMENTS DEFINED FOR OUR ANALYSIS

Table 6 Lines and segments defined in this work 

Line Wave Peak Wave Base Wave Top Segm. Wave base Segm. Wave top
Na 1 588.9959 588.9422 589.0422 588.8922 589.0922
Na 1 589.5916 589.5411 589.6411 589.4911 589.6911
Fe 1 593.0186 592.9859 593.0539 592.9359 593.1039
Fe 1 593.4665 593.4289 593.5059 593.3789 593.5559
No ident. 595.6706 595.6206 595.7206 595.5706 595.7706
Fe 1 597.5341 597.4898 597.5898 597.4398 597.7729
Fe 1 597.6777 597.6299 597.7229 - -
Fe 1 598.4831 598.4319 598.5689 598.3819 598.8099
Fe 1 598.7088 598.6449 598.7599 - -
Fe 1 600.2986 600.2519 600.3509 600.2019 600.4009
Fe 1 600.8552 600.8249 600.8989 600.7749 600.9489
Mn 1 601.6628 601.6110 601.7110 601.5610 601.7610
Fe 1 602.0142 601.9637 602.0637 601.9137 602.1137
Fe 1 602.4066 602.3579 602.4639 602.3079 602.5139
Fe 1 605.6032 605.5599 605.6809 605.5099 605.7309
Fe 1 606.5494 606.5009 606.5919 606.4509 606.6419
Fe 1 607.8490 607.7729 607.8769 607.7229 607.9269
Fe 1 608.2757 608.2180 608.3180 608.1680 608.3680
Fe 1 608.5228 608.4775 608.5775 608.4275 608.6275
Ca 1 612.2225 612.1703 612.2703 612.1203 612.3203
No ident. 615.1608 615.1108 615.2108 615.0608 615.2608
Ca 1 616.2171 616.1690 616.2690 616.1190 616.3190
Fe 1 617.0503 617.0028 617.1168 616.9528 617.1668
Fe1 617.3340 617.2828 617.3838 617.2328 617.4338
Fe 1 621.3421 621.2988 621.3958 621.2488 621.4458
Fe 1 621.9270 621.8418 621.9698 621.7918 622.0198
Fe 1 623.0722 623.0278 623.1868 622.9778 623.3578
Fe 1 623.2644 623.1868 623.3078 - -
Fe 1 624.6326 624.5898 624.6868 624.5398 624.7368
Fe 1 625.2564 625.2108 625.3108 625.1608 625.7298
Fe 1 625.4240 625.3298 625.5098 - -
Fe 1 625.6343 625.5628 625.6798 - -
Fe 1 629.0951 629.0473 629.1473 628.9973 629.1973
Fe 1 629.7808 629.7138 629.8548 629.6638 629.9048
Fe 1 630.1508 630.0898 630.2028 630.0398 630.3528
Fe 1 630.2514 630.2028 630.3028 - -
Fe 1 632.2710 632.2228 632.3128 632.1728 632.3628
Fe 1 633.5331 633.4658 633.5888 633.4158 633.7978
Fe 1 633.6827 633.6388 633.7478 - -
Fe 1 635.5038 635.4468 635.5768 635.3968 635.6268
Fe 1 635.8671 635.8128 635.9258 635.7628 635.9758
Fe 1 638.0743 638.0264 638.1264 637.9764 638.1764
Fe 1 639.3612 639.2968 639.4278 639.2468 639.4778
Fe 1 640.8011 640.7578 640.9138 640.7078 640.9638
Fe 1 641.1646 641.0878 641.2198 641.0378 641.2698
Fe 2 641.6962 641.6449 641.7449 641.5949 641.7949
Fe 1 641.9949 641.9428 642.0408 641.8928 642.2598
Fe 1 642.1377 642.0758 642.2098 - -
Fe 1 643.0851 643.0158 643.1528 642.9658 643.3681
Fe 2 643.2663 643.2181 643.3181 - -
Ca 1 643.9063 643.8572 643.9572 643.8072 644.0072
Fe 2 645.6405 645.5866 645.6866 645.5366 645.7366
Ca 1 646.2606 646.2081 646.3081 646.1581 646.3581
Fe 1 646.9200 646.8711 646.9711 646.8211 647.0211
Fe 1 647.5657 647.5117 647.6117 647.4617 647.6617
Fe 1 648.1882 648.1362 648.2362 648.0862 648.2862
Fe 1 649.4989 649.4197 649.5437 649.3697 649.5937
Fe 2 651.6098 651.5587 651.6587 651.5087 651.7087
Fe 1 651.8385 651.7868 651.8868 651.7368 651.9368
Fe 1 654.6245 654.5757 654.6967 654.5257 654.7467
H 1 656.2808 655.5483 656.6832 655.1934 656.7340
Fe 1 657.5003 657.4507 657.5507 657.4007 657.6007
Fe 1 659.3887 659.3417 659.4537 659.2917 659.5037
Fe 1 659.7585 659.7073 659.8073 659.6573 659.8573
Fe 1 660.9067 660.8605 660.9605 660.8105 661.0105
Ni 1 664.3626 664.3139 664.4139 664.2639 664.4639
Fe 1 667.7983 667.7297 667.8707 667.6797 667.9207
Fe 1 670.5134 670.4570 670.5570 670.4070 670.6070
No ident. 671.3073 671.2573 671.3573 671.2073 671.4073
Ca 1 671.7701 671.7138 671.8138 671.6638 671.8638
Fe 1 672.6657 672.6178 672.7178 672.5678 672.7678
Fe 1 675.0182 674.9653 675.0653 674.9153 675.1153
Fe 1 680.6856 680.6358 680.7358 680.5858 680.7858
Fe 1 682.0359 681.9894 682.0894 681.9394 682.1394
Fe 1 682.8620 682.8085 682.9085 682.7585 682.9585
No ident. 683.9811 683.9311 684.0311 683.8811 684.0811
Fe 1 684.3658 684.3150 684.4150 684.2650 684.4650
Fe 1 691.6669 691.6218 691.7218 691.5718 691.7718
No ident. 693.3635 693.3135 693.4135 693.2635 693.4635
Fe1 694.5196 694.4703 694.5703 694.4203 694.6203
- - - - 694.6410 694.8410
Fe 1 695.1251 695.0721 695.1721 695.0221 695.2221
Fe 1 703.8209 703.7718 703.8718 703.7218 703.9218
Fe 1 706.8440 706.7918 706.8918 706.7418 706.9418
Fe 1 709.0378 708.9850 709.0850 708.9350 709.1350
Fe 1 713.0900 713.0451 713.1451 712.9951 713.1951
Fe 1 713.3001 713.2453 713.3453 713.1953 713.3953
CN 1 714.5241 714.4768 714.5768 714.4268 714.6268
Ca 1 714.8155 714.7666 714.8666 714.7166 714.9166
Fe 1 715.5670 715.5125 715.6125 715.4625 715.6625
No ident. 716.4473 716.3185 716.5085 716.2685 716.5585
Fe 1 717.5970 717.5403 717.6403 717.4903 717.6903
Fe 1 721.9712 721.9134 722.0134 721.8634 722.2190
CN 1 722.1100 722.0690 722.1690 - -
No ident. 724.4812 724.4312 724.5312 724.3812 724.5812
Fe 1 732.0693 732.0178 732.1178 731.9678 732.1678
Fe 1 738.6353 738.5818 738.6818 738.5318 738.7318
Fe 1 738.9363 738.8454 738.9974 738.7954 739.0474
Fe 1 741.1151 741.0394 741.1764 740.9894 741.2264
Ni 1 742.2264 742.1770 742.2770 742.1270 742.3270
No ident. 744.0877 744.0377 744.1377 743.9877 744.1877
Fe 1 744.5740 744.5174 744.6654 744.4674 744.7154
Fe 1 749.5088 749.4484 749.5724 749.3984 749.6224
Fe 1 751.1024 751.0024 751.1854 750.9524 751.2354
Fe 1 771.0389 770.9827 771.0827 770.9327 771.1327
Fe 1 772.3237 772.2724 772.3724 772.2224 772.4224
Fe 1 774.8304 774.7653 774.8613 774.7153 774.9113
Ni 1 775.1163 775.0625 775.1625 775.0125 775.2125
Fe 1 778.0562 777.9613 778.1263 777.9113 778.1763
Fe 1 783.2221 783.1453 783.3183 783.0953 783.3683
Fe 1 793.7145 793.6112 793.7802 793.5612 793.8302
Fe 1 794.5839 794.5132 794.6502 794.4632 794.7002
Fe 1 799.8967 799.8112 799.9622 799.7612 800.0122
No ident. 804.6052 804.5282 804.7002 804.4782 804.7502
No ident. 808.5170 808.4442 808.6012 808.3942 808.6512
Fe 1 820.7791 820.7284 820.8284 820.6784 820.8784
Fe 1 832.7062 832.6341 832.7711 832.5841 832.8211
Fe 1 838.7760 838.7061 838.8521 838.6561 838.9021
Fe 1 846.8392 846.7820 846.8930 846.7320 846.9430
Fe 1 851.4073 851.3290 851.4650 851.2790 851.5150
Fe 1 868.8639 868.7760 868.9430 868.7260 868.9930
No ident. 871.0395 870.9895 871.0895 870.9395 871.1395

Received: February 06, 2020; Accepted: January 07, 2021

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