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LEMUR: Large European Module for Solar Ultraviolet Research

Authors :
Teriaca, Luca
Vincenzo, Andretta
Auchere, Frederic
Brown, Charles M
Buchlin, Eric
Cauzzi, Gianna
Culhane, J. Len
Curdt, Werner
Davila, Joseph M
Del Zanna, Giulio
Doschek, George A
Fineschi, Silvano
Fludra, Andrzej
Gallagher, Peter T
Green, Lucie
Harra, Louise K
Imada, Shinsuke
Innes, Davina
Kliem, Bernhard
Korendyke, Clarence
Mariska, John T
Martinez-Pillet, Valentin
Parenti, Susanna
Patsourakos, Spiros
Peter, Hardi
Poletto, Luca
Rutten, Robert J
Schuhle, Udo
Siemer, Martin
Shimizu, Toshifumi
Socas-Navarro, Hector
Solanki, Sami K
Spadaro, Daniele
Trujillo-Bueno, Javier
Tsuneta, Saku
Dominguez, Santiago Vargas
Vial, Jean-Claude
Walsh, Robert
Warren, Harry P
Wiegelmann, Thomas
Winter, Berend
Young, Peter
Source :
Experimental Astronomy. 34(2)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2012.

Abstract

The solar outer atmosphere is an extremely dynamic environment characterized by the continuous interplay between the plasma and the magnetic field that generates and permeates it. Such interactions play a fundamental role in hugely diverse astrophysical systems, but occur at scales that cannot be studied outside the solar system. Understanding this complex system requires concerted, simultaneous solar observations from the visible to the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) and soft X-rays, at high spatial resolution (between 0.1′′ and 0.3′′), at high temporal resolution (on the order of 10 s, i.e., the time scale of chromospheric dynamics), with a wide temperature coverage (0.01 MK to 20 MK, from the chromosphere to the flaring corona), and the capability of measuring magnetic fields through spectropolarimetry at visible and near-infrared wavelengths. Simultaneous spectroscopic measurements sampling the entire temperature range are particularly important. These requirements are fulfilled by the Japanese Solar-C mission (Plan B), composed of a spacecraft in a geosynchronous orbit with a payload providing a significant improvement of imaging and spectropolarimetric capabilities in the UV, visible, and near-infrared with respect to what is available today and foreseen in the near future. The Large European Module for solar Ultraviolet Research (LEMUR), described in this paper, is a large VUV telescope feeding a scientific payload of high-resolution imaging spectrographs and cameras. LEMUR consists of two major components: a VUV solar telescope with a 30 cm diameter mirror and a focal length of 3.6 m, and a focal-plane package composed of VUV spectrometers covering six carefully chosen wavelength ranges between 170 Angstrom and 1270 Angstrom. The LEMUR slit covers 280′′ on the Sun with 0.14′′ per pixel sampling. In addition, LEMUR is capable of measuring mass flows velocities (line shifts) down to 2 km s − 1 or better. LEMUR has been proposed to ESA as the European contribution to the Solar C mission.

Subjects

Subjects :
Solar Physics

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
34
Issue :
2
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Experimental Astronomy
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20140008334
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10686-011-9274-x