Bibcode
Teriaca, Luca; Andretta, Vincenzo; Auchère, Frédéric; 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.; Martínez-Pillet, V.; Parenti, Susanna; Patsourakos, Spiros; Peter, Hardi; Poletto, Luca; Rutten, Robert J.; Schühle, Udo; Siemer, Martin; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Socas-Navarro, H.; Solanki, Sami K.; Spadaro, Daniele; Trujillo-Bueno, J.; Tsuneta, Saku; Dominguez, Santiago Vargas; Vial, Jean-Claude; Walsh, Robert; Warren, Harry P.; Wiegelmann, Thomas; Winter, Berend; Young, Peter
Referencia bibliográfica
Experimental Astronomy, Volume 34, Issue 2, pp.273-309
Fecha de publicación:
10
2012
Revista
Número de citas
23
Número de citas referidas
19
Descripción
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 Å and 1270 Å.
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.
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