Paper
4 February 2004 MAGRITTE: an instrument suite for the solar atmospheric imaging assembly (AIA) aboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory
Pierre L. Rochus, Jean-Marc Defise, Jean-Philippe Halain, Claude A. J. Jamar, Emmanuel Mazy, Laurence Rossi, Tanguy Thibert, Frederic Clette, Pierre Cugnon, David Berghmans, Jean-Francois E. Hochedez, Jean-Pierre Delaboudiniere, Frederic Auchere, Raymond Mercier, Marie-Francoise Ravet, Franck Delmotte, Mourad Idir, Udo H. Schuehle, Volker Bothmer, Silvano Fineschi, Russell A. Howard, John Daniel Moses, Jeffrey S. Newmark
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Solar Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) aboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory will characterize the dynamical evolution of the solar plasma from the chromosphere to the corona, and will follow the connection of plasma dynamics with magnetic activity throughout the solar atmosphere. The AIA consists of 7 high-resolution imaging telescopes in the following spectral bandpasses: 1215Å. Ly-a, 304 Å He II, 629 Å OV, 465 Å Ne VII, 195 Å Fe XII (includes Fe XXIV), 284 Å Fe XV, and 335 Å Fe XVI. The telescopes are grouped by instrumental approach: the MAGRITTE Filtergraphs (R. MAGRITTE, famous 20th Century Belgian Surrealistic Artist), five multilayer EUV channels with bandpasses ranging from 195 to 1216 Å, and the SPECTRE Spectroheliograph with one soft-EUV channel at OV 629 Å. They will be simultaneously operated with a 10-second imaging cadence. These two instruments, the electronic boxes and two redundant Guide Telescopes (GT) constitute the AIA suite. They will be mounted and coaligned on a dedicated common optical bench. The GTs will provide pointing jitter information to the whole SHARPP assembly. This paper presents the selected technologies, the different challenges, the trade-offs to be made in phase A, and the model philosophy. From a scientific viewpoint, the unique combination high temporal and spatial resolutions with the simultaneous multi-channel capability will allow MAGRITTE / SPECTRE to explore new domains in the dynamics of the solar atmosphere, in particular the fast small-scale phenomena. We show how the spectral channels of the different instruments were derived to fulfill the AIA scientific objectives, and we outline how this imager array will address key science issues, like the transition region and coronal waves or flare precursors, in coordination with other SDO experiments. We finally describe the real-time solar monitoring products that will be made available for space-weather forecasting applications.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Pierre L. Rochus, Jean-Marc Defise, Jean-Philippe Halain, Claude A. J. Jamar, Emmanuel Mazy, Laurence Rossi, Tanguy Thibert, Frederic Clette, Pierre Cugnon, David Berghmans, Jean-Francois E. Hochedez, Jean-Pierre Delaboudiniere, Frederic Auchere, Raymond Mercier, Marie-Francoise Ravet, Franck Delmotte, Mourad Idir, Udo H. Schuehle, Volker Bothmer, Silvano Fineschi, Russell A. Howard, John Daniel Moses, and Jeffrey S. Newmark "MAGRITTE: an instrument suite for the solar atmospheric imaging assembly (AIA) aboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory", Proc. SPIE 5171, Telescopes and Instrumentation for Solar Astrophysics, (4 February 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.503964
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Extreme ultraviolet

Telescopes

Mirrors

Solar processes

Iron

Optical filters

Observatories

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