Bibcode
Martínez-Pillet, V.; Del Toro Iniesta, J. C.; Álvarez-Herrero, A.; Domingo, V.; Bonet, J. A.; González Fernández, L.; López Jiménez, A.; Pastor, C.; Gasent Blesa, J. L.; Mellado, P.; Piqueras, J.; Aparicio, B.; Balaguer, M.; Ballesteros, E.; Belenguer, T.; Bellot Rubio, L. R.; Berkefeld, T.; Collados, M.; Deutsch, W.; Feller, A.; Girela, F.; Grauf, B.; Heredero, R. L.; Herranz, M.; Jerónimo, J. M.; Laguna, H.; Meller, R.; Menéndez, M.; Morales, R.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Ramos, G.; Reina, M.; Ramos, J. L.; Rodríguez, P.; Sánchez, A.; Uribe-Patarroyo, N.; Barthol, P.; Gandorfer, A.; Knoelker, M.; Schmidt, W.; Solanki, S. K.; Vargas-Domínguez, S.
Referencia bibliográfica
Solar Physics, Volume 268, Issue 1, pp.57-102
Fecha de publicación:
1
2011
Revista
Número de citas
239
Número de citas referidas
216
Descripción
The Imaging Magnetograph eXperiment (IMaX) is a spectropolarimeter built
by four institutions in Spain that flew on board the Sunrise
balloon-borne solar observatory in June 2009 for almost six days over
the Arctic Circle. As a polarimeter, IMaX uses fast polarization
modulation (based on the use of two liquid crystal retarders), real-time
image accumulation, and dual-beam polarimetry to reach polarization
sensitivities of 0.1%. As a spectrograph, the instrument uses a
LiNbO3 etalon in double pass and a narrow band pre-filter to
achieve a spectral resolution of 85 mÅ. IMaX uses the
high-Zeeman-sensitive line of Fe i at 5250.2 Å and observes all
four Stokes parameters at various points inside the spectral line. This
allows vector magnetograms, Dopplergrams, and intensity frames to be
produced that, after reconstruction, reach spatial resolutions in the
0.15 - 0.18 arcsec range over a 50×50 arcsec field of view. Time
cadences vary between 10 and 33 s, although the shortest one only
includes longitudinal polarimetry. The spectral line is sampled in
various ways depending on the applied observing mode, from just two
points inside the line to 11 of them. All observing modes include one
extra wavelength point in the nearby continuum. Gauss equivalent
sensitivities are 4 G for longitudinal fields and 80 G for transverse
fields per wavelength sample. The line-of-sight velocities are estimated
with statistical errors of the order of 5 - 40 m s-1. The
design, calibration, and integration phases of the instrument, together
with the implemented data reduction scheme, are described in some
detail.
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Los campos magnéticos son uno de los ingredientes fundamentales en la formación de estrellas y su evolución. En el nacimiento de una estrella, los campos magnéticos llegan a frenar su rotación durante el colapso de la nube molecular, y en el fin de la vida de una estrella, el magnetismo puede ser clave en la forma en la que se pierden las capas
Tobías
Felipe García