Abstract:
The thesis work ’Spectroscopic Characterization of Exoplanets and Host
Stars,’ tries a tiny step towards understanding the connection between the exoplanet and the host star. We study the observational perspective of exoplanets
and host stars using optical spectroscopy. Our analysis of host star carbon abundances as a function of planet occurrence rate in the LAMOST-Kepler field shows
giant planets are preferentially found around iron-rich and carbon-rich host stars.
However, the sub-solar [C/Fe] value of giant planet host stars indicates that carbon may not be as important as iron or that the overall metallicity is crucial
rather than a single element like carbon or iron for planet formation. Differential abundance analysis of planet hosts in visual binary twin systems shows that
planet-induced pollution in the host star chemical abundance is less than 0.01
dex. It is well within the typical error in abundance estimates, which indicates
that occurrence rate calculations are not influenced by planet pollution in the host
star photosphere. The accuracy of differential abundances needs to be better than
0.01dex to infer any trend in the abundances due to planet formation.
The low-resolution transmission spectroscopy from the 2 m Himalayan Chandra
Telescope using long-slit multi-object observations successfully detected several
atmospheric features in the atmosphere of three exoplanets HAT-P-1 b, KELT-18
b, and WASP-127 b. The advantage of having a bluer part of the spectra, we
were able to detect CaI (4227 ˚A) in the atmosphere of HAT-P-1 b and Rayleigh
scattering slope in the atmosphere of WASP-127 b. We observed flat, featureless
transmission spectra of KELT-18 b for the first time at low resolution. Simultaneous observation of reference stars helped to avoid the systematic errors introduced
during the observations. We perform transmission spectroscopy with Keck-HIRES
for the first time. We achieved a wavelength calibration accuracy of 60 m/s for
HIRES, using a wavelength recalibration method. We detect residual sodium signals at a blue-shifted stellar rest frame location.
Occulted and unocculted stellar inhomogeneity can change the observed transit
signal or can add extra noise to the observed data. Here we studied three years
of disk-integrated solar spectra from HARPS to quantify the inhomogeneity using
the spectral indices. From the preliminary analysis, we found that the faculae
fraction than the spot fraction influences the line indices. Ca II H & K linearly
correlated with faculae fraction, and all the Balmer lines are sensitive to faculae
fraction but have a complex trend compared to CaII H & K lines.