1. Solaris: A Focused Solar Polar Discovery-class Mission to achieve the Highest Priority Heliophysics Science Now
- Author
-
Hassler, Donald M., Gibson, Sarah E, Newmark, Jeffrey S, Featherstone, Nicholas A., Upton, Lisa, Viall, Nicholeen M, Hoeksema, J Todd, Auchere, Frederic, Birch, Aaron, Braun, Doug, Charbonneau, Paul, Colannino, Robin, DeForest, Craig, Dikpati, Mausumi, Downs, Cooper, Duncan, Nicole, Elliott, Heather Alison, Fan, Yuhong, Fineschi, Silvano, Gizon, Laurent, Gosain, Sanjay, Harra, Louise, Hindman, Brad, Berghmans, David, Lepri, Susan T, Linker, Jon, Moldwin, Mark B., Munoz-Jaramillo, Andres, Nandy, Dibyendu, Rivera, Yeimy, Schou, Jesper, Sokol, Justyna, Thompson, Barbara, Velli, Marco, Woods, Thomas N., and Zhao, Junwei
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) - Abstract
Solaris is a transformative Solar Polar Discovery-class mission concept to address crucial outstanding questions that can only be answered from a polar vantage. Solaris will image the Sun's poles from ~75 degree latitude, providing new insight into the workings of the solar dynamo and the solar cycle, which are at the foundation of our understanding of space weather and space climate. Solaris will also provide enabling observations for improved space weather research, modeling and prediction, revealing a unique, new view of the corona, coronal dynamics and CME eruptions from above., Comment: This White Paper was submitted in 2022 to the United States National Academies Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) Decadal Survey
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF