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The Second Flight of the Sunrise Balloon-borne Solar Observatory: Overview of Instrument Updates, the Flight, the Data, and First Results

Authors :
L. Sabau-Graziati
G. Card
Peter Barthol
H.-P. Doerr
V. Martínez Pillet
A. C. López Jiménez
J. C. del Toro Iniesta
Andreas Lagg
C. Halbgewachs
M. Balaguer Jiménez
Thomas Berkefeld
M. Kolleck
G. Tomasch
W. Deutsch
Alberto Álvarez-Herrero
Sami K. Solanki
Laurent Gizon
Johann Hirzberger
Tino L. Riethmüller
Alex Feller
M. van Noort
M. Knölker
D. Germerott
K. Heerlein
Sanja Danilovic
D. Orozco Suárez
Rebecca Centeno
A. Lecinski
J. L. Gasent Blesa
J. Blanco Rodríguez
Wolfgang Schmidt
I. Pérez Grande
Achim Gandorfer
R. Meller
B. Grauf
Max Planck Society
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
National Science Foundation (US)
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US)
National Research Foundation of Korea
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2017.

Abstract

S. K. Solanki et. al.<br />©2017 The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.The Sunrise balloon-borne solar observatory, consisting of a 1 m aperture telescope that provides a stabilized image to a UV filter imager and an imaging vector polarimeter, carried out its second science flight in 2013 June. It provided observations of parts of active regions at high spatial resolution, including the first high-resolution images in the Mg ii k line. The obtained data are of very high quality, with the best UV images reaching the diffraction limit of the telescope at 3000 Å after Multi-Frame Blind Deconvolution reconstruction accounting for phase-diversity information. Here a brief update is given of the instruments and the data reduction techniques, which includes an inversion of the polarimetric data. Mainly those aspects that evolved compared with the first flight are described. A tabular overview of the observations is given. In addition, an example time series of a part of the emerging active region NOAA AR 11768 observed relatively close to disk center is described and discussed in some detail. The observations cover the pores in the trailing polarity of the active region, as well as the polarity inversion line where flux emergence was ongoing and a small flare-like brightening occurred in the course of the time series. The pores are found to contain magnetic field strengths ranging up to 2500 G, and while large pores are clearly darker and cooler than the quiet Sun in all layers of the photosphere, the temperature and brightness of small pores approach or even exceed those of the quiet Sun in the upper photosphere.<br />The German contribution to Sunrise and its reflight was funded by the Max Planck Foundation, the Strategic Innovations Fund of the President of the Max Planck Society (MPG), DLR, and private donations by supporting members of the Max Planck Society, which is gratefully acknowledged. The Spanish contribution was funded by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad under Projects ESP2013-47349-C6 and ESP2014-56169-C6, partially using European FEDER funds. The National Center for Atmospheric Research is sponsored by the National Science Foundation. The HAO contribution was partly funded through NASA grant number NNX13AE95G. This work was partly supported by the BK21 plus program through the National Research Foundation (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education of Korea. L.G. acknowledges research funding from the State of Lower Saxony, Germany. SDO is a mission of NASA's Living With a Star (LWS) program. The SDO/HMI data were provided by the Joint Science Operation Center (JSOC). The National Solar Observatory (NSO) is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) Inc. under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.

Details

ISSN :
15384365
Volume :
229
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....011b0705c5a53b930ae1bf919a7023fa