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Sunrise: instrument, mission, data and first results

Authors :
Solanki, S. K.
Barthol, P.
Danilovic, S.
Feller, A.
Gandorfer, A.
Hirzberger, J.
Riethmueller, T. L.
Schüssler, M.
Bonet, J. A.
Pillet, V. Martínez
Iniesta, J. C. del Toro
Domingo, V.
Palacios, J.
Knölker, M.
González, N. Bello
Berkefeld, T.
Franz, M.
Schmidt, W.
Title, A. M.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The Sunrise balloon-borne solar observatory consists of a 1m aperture Gregory telescope, a UV filter imager, an imaging vector polarimeter, an image stabilization system and further infrastructure. The first science flight of Sunrise yielded high-quality data that reveal the structure, dynamics and evolution of solar convection, oscillations and magnetic fields at a resolution of around 100 km in the quiet Sun. After a brief description of instruments and data, first qualitative results are presented. In contrast to earlier observations, we clearly see granulation at 214 nm. Images in Ca II H display narrow, short-lived dark intergranular lanes between the bright edges of granules. The very small-scale, mixed-polarity internetwork fields are found to be highly dynamic. A significant increase in detectable magnetic flux is found after phase-diversity-related reconstruction of polarization maps, indicating that the polarities are mixed right down to the spatial resolution limit, and probably beyond.<br />Comment: accepted by ApJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1008.3460
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/723/2/L127