Predictions of planet detections with near infrared radial velocities in the up-coming SPIRou Legacy Survey-Planet Search

Abstract

The SPIRou near infrared spectro-polarimeter is destined to begin science operations at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope in mid-2018. One of the instrument's primary science goals is to discover the closest exoplanets to the Solar System by conducting a 3-5 year long radial velocity survey of nearby M dwarfs at an expected precision of 1 m s-1; the SPIRou Legacy Survey-Planet Search (SLS-PS). In this study we conduct a detailed Monte-Carlo simulation of the SLS-PS using our current understanding of the occurrence rate of M dwarf planetary systems and physical models of stellar activity. From simultaneous modelling of planetary signals and activity, we predict the population of planets detected in the SLS-PS. With our fiducial survey strategy and expected instrument performance over a nominal survey length of 3 years, we expect SPIRou to detect 85.3+29.3-12.4 planets including 20.0+16.8-7.2 habitable zone planets and 8.1+7.6-3.2 Earth-like planets from a sample of 100 M1-M8.5 dwarfs out to 11 pc. By studying mid-to-late M dwarfs previously inaccessible to existing optical velocimeters, SPIRou will put meaningful constraints on the occurrence rate of planets around those stars including the value of η at an expected level of precision of 45%. We also predict a subset of 46.7+16.0-6.0 planets may be accessible with dedicated high-contrast imagers on the next generation of ELTs including 4.9+4.7-2.0 potentially imagable Earth-like planets. Lastly, we compare the results of our fiducial survey strategy to other foreseeable survey versions to quantify which strategy is optimized to reach the SLS-PS science goals. The results of our simulations are made available to the community on github.

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