Bibcode
Caballero, J. A.; Cortés-Contreras, M.; Alonso-Floriano, F. J.; Montes, D.; Quirrenbach, A.; Amado, P. J.; Ribas, I.; Reiners, A.; Abellán, F. J.; Béjar, V. J. S.; Brinkmoller, M.; Czesla, S.; Dorda, R.; Gallardo, I.; Hidalgo, D.; Holgado, G.; Fedriani, R.; González-Alvarez, E.; Jeffers, S. V.; Kim, M.; Klutsch, A.; Lamert, A.; Llamas, M.; López-Santiago, J.; Martínez-Rodríguez, H.; Morales, J. C.; Passegger, V. M.; Schofer, P.; Zechmeister, M.
Bibliographical reference
Highlights on Spanish Astrophysics IX, Proceedings of the XII Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society held on July 18-22, 2016, in Bilbao, Spain, ISBN 978-84-606-8760-3. S. Arribas, A. Alonso-Herrero, F. Figueras, C. Hernández-Monteagudo, A. Sánchez-Lavega, S. Pérez-Hoyos (eds.), 2017 , p. 496-496
Advertised on:
3
2017
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
CARMENES, the new ultra-stable high-resolution spectrograph at the 3.5 m
Calar Alto telescope and the only one in its category that covers from
0.52 to 1.71μm in one shot, started its guaranteed time observations
(GTO) in January 2016. Under GTO, CARMENES is monitoring approximately
300 selected M dwarfs for at least three years with the aim of finding
rocky planets, perhaps habitable, orbiting around them. Those 300 GTO
stars are the brightest and latest single M dwarfs observable from Calar
Alto, which are carefully picked up from the CARMENES input catalogue,
dubbed ''Carmencita'': CARMENES Cool star Information and daTa Archive.
For each of the over 2200 M dwarfs in Carmencita, a team of German and
Spanish astronomers involving PhD, MSc and BSc students has collected a
large amount of information, compiled from the literature or measured by
us with new data: accurate astrometry, spectral typing, photometry in 19
bands from the ultraviolet to the mid-infrared, rotational and radial
velocities, X-ray count rates and hardness ratios, close and wide
multiplicity data, kinematics, derived stellar parameters... The private
online catalogue, including preparatory science observations (i.e.,
high-resolution imaging, low-and high-resolution spectroscopy), will be
eventually public as a CARMENES legacy.