Improving radial velocity precision with CARMENES-PLUS:An upgrade of the near-infrared spectrograph cooling system

R. Varas, R. Calvo-Ortega, P. J. Amado, S. Becerril, H. Ruh, M. Azzaro, L. Hernandez, H. Magan-Madinabeitia, S. Reinhart, D. Maroto-Fernandez, J. Helmling, A. L. Huelmo, D. Benitez, J. F. Lopez, M. Pineda, J. A. Garcia, J. Garcia de la Fuente, J. Marin, F. Hernandez, J. Aceituno, J. A. Caballero, A. Kaminski, R. J. Mathar, A. Quirrenbach, A. Reiners, I. Ribas, W. Seifert, M. Zechmeister

Published: 2025/9/22

Abstract

CARMENES is a dual-channel high-resolution spectrograph at the 3.5 m Calar Alto telescope designed to detect low-mass planets around late-type dwarfs by measuring their radial velocities (RVs). High thermal stability in both the visible (VIS) and near infrared channels is essential to achieve the precision required for these measurements. In particular, stabilising the NIR channel to the millikelvin level, which operates at cryogenic temperatures (140 K), poses significant engineering challenges.The CARMENES-PLUS project was initiated to improve the instruments intrinsic RV precision. In this article, we focus on the thermal stability improvements made to the NIR channels cooling system. The NIR cooling system was originally conceived to operate with a discontinuous flow of cryogenic nitrogen gas. As part of CARMENES-PLUS, this was upgraded to a continuous flow configuration. Additional changes included the installation of an automatic vacuum system, a proportional control valve, and a pressure regulation system. These upgrades were designed to reduce thermal fluctuations and enhance long-term stability. The implemented upgrades significantly improved the intrinsic RV precision of the NIR channel. We quantified this improvement using Fabry Perot calibration spectra, obtaining an intrinsic RV precision of 0.67 ms after the interventions, an improvement of nearly 2 ms . We also assessed the stability of the nightly zero points, finding a reduced scatter of 3.9 ms post upgrade, compared to 6.1 ms before. For a sample of slowly rotating stars (vsin i below 2 kms), the median scatter decreased from 8.8 ms to 6.7 ms after the upgrades. These results demonstrate that the thermal control upgrades introduced in CARMENES PLUS have enhanced the NIR channels RV performance, bringing it closer to the VIS channels stability and reinforcing CARMENES capabilities for exoplanet detection around M dwarfs.

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