The HIRES spectrograph, mounted on the 10-m Keck-I telescope, belongs to a
small group of radial-velocity (RV) instruments that produce stellar RVs with
long-term precision down to ∼1 ms−1. In 2017, the HIRES team
published 64,480 RVs of 1,699 stars, collected between 1996 and 2014.
In this bank of RVs, we identify a sample of RV-quiet stars, whose RV scatter
is <10 ms−1, and use them to reveal two small but significant nightly
zero-point effects: a discontinuous jump, caused by major modifications of the
instrument in August 2004, and a long-term drift. The size of the 2004 jump
is 1.5±0.1 ms−1, and the slow zero-point variations have a typical
magnitude of ≲1 ms−1. In addition, we find a small but
significant correlation between stellar RVs and the time relative to local
midnight, indicative of an average intra-night drift of 0.051±0.004
ms−1hr−1. We correct the 64,480 HIRES RVs for the systematic
effects we find, and make the corrected RVs publicly available. Our findings
demonstrate the importance of observing RV-quiet stars, even in the era of
simultaneously-calibrated RV spectrographs. We hope that the corrected HIRES
RVs will facilitate the search for new planet candidates around the observed
stars.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure