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1.
V. Delouille J. De Patoul J. F. Hochedez L. Jacques J. P. Antoine 《Solar physics》2005,228(1-2):301-321
The extreme ultraviolet imaging telescope (EIT) of SOHO offers a unique record of the solar atmosphere for its sampling in
temperature, field of view, resolution, duration, and cadence. To investigate globally and locally its topology and evolution
during the solar cycle, we consider a multi-scale approach, and more precisely we use the wavelet spectrum.
We present three results among the applications of such a procedure. First, we estimate the typical dimension of the supergranules
as seen in the 30.4 nm passband, and we show that the evolution of the characteristic network scale is almost in phase with
the solar cycle. Second, we build pertinent time series that give the evolution of the signal energy present in the corona
at different scales. We propose a method that detects eruptions and post-flaring activity in EUV image sequences. Third, we
introduce a new way to extract active regions in EIT images, with perspectives in, e.g., long-term irradiance analysis. 相似文献
2.
3.
S. Turck-Chièze P. Lamy C. Carr P. H. Carton A. Chevalier I. Dandouras J. M. Defise S. Dewitte T. Dudok de Wit J. P. Halain S. Hasan J. F. Hochedez T. Horbury P. Levacher M. Meissonier N. Murphy P. Rochus A. Ruzmaikin W. Schmutz G. Thuillier S. Vivès 《Experimental Astronomy》2009,23(3):1017-1055
The DynaMICCS mission is designed to probe and understand the dynamics of crucial regions of the Sun that determine solar
variability, including the previously unexplored inner core, the radiative/convective zone interface layers, the photosphere/chromosphere
layers and the low corona. The mission delivers data and knowledge that no other known mission provides for understanding
space weather and space climate and for advancing stellar physics (internal dynamics) and fundamental physics (neutrino properties,
atomic physics, gravitational moments...). The science objectives are achieved using Doppler and magnetic measurements of
the solar surface, helioseismic and coronographic measurements, solar irradiance at different wavelengths and in-situ measurements
of plasma/energetic particles/magnetic fields. The DynaMICCS payload uses an original concept studied by Thalès Alenia Space
in the framework of the CNES call for formation flying missions: an external occultation of the solar light is obtained by
putting an occulter spacecraft 150 m (or more) in front of a second spacecraft. The occulter spacecraft, a LEO platform of
the mini sat class, e.g. PROTEUS, type carries the helioseismic and irradiance instruments and the formation flying technologies.
The latter spacecraft of the same type carries a visible and infrared coronagraph for a unique observation of the solar corona
and instrumentation for the study of the solar wind and imagers. This mission must guarantee long (one 11-year solar cycle)
and continuous observations (duty cycle > 94%) of signals that can be very weak (the gravity mode detection supposes the measurement
of velocity smaller than 1 mm/s). This assumes no interruption in observation and very stable thermal conditions. The preferred
orbit therefore is the L1 orbit, which fits these requirements very well and is also an attractive environment for the spacecraft
due to its low radiation and low perturbation (solar pressure) environment. This mission is secured by instrumental R and
D activities during the present and coming years. Some prototypes of different instruments are already built (GOLFNG, SDM)
and the performances will be checked before launch on the ground or in space through planned missions of CNES and PROBA ESA
missions (PICARD, LYRA, maybe ASPIICS). 相似文献
4.
Picard SODISM, a Space Telescope to Study the Sun from the Middle Ultraviolet to the Near Infrared 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
M. Meftah J.-F. Hochedez A. Irbah A. Hauchecorne P. Boumier T. Corbard S. Turck-Chièze S. Abbaki P. Assus E. Bertran P. Bourget F. Buisson M. Chaigneau L. Damé D. Djafer C. Dufour P. Etcheto P. Ferrero M. Hersé J.-P. Marcovici M. Meissonnier F. Morand G. Poiet J.-Y. Prado C. Renaud N. Rouanet M. Rouzé D. Salabert A.-J. Vieau 《Solar physics》2014,289(3):1043-1076
5.
J. Zender D. Berghmans D. S. Bloomfield C. Cabanas Parada I. Dammasch A. De Groof E. D’Huys M. Dominique P. Gallagher B. Giordanengo P. A. Higgins J.-F. Hochedez M. S. Yalim B. Nicula E. Pylyser L. Sanchez-Duarte G. Schwehm D. B. Seaton A. Stanger K. Stegen S. Willems 《Solar physics》2013,286(1):93-110
The PROBA2 Science Centre (P2SC) is a small-scale science operations centre supporting the Sun observation instruments onboard PROBA2: the EUV imager Sun Watcher using APS detectors and image Processing (SWAP) and Large-Yield Radiometer (LYRA). PROBA2 is one of ESA’s small, low-cost Projects for Onboard Autonomy (PROBA) and part of ESA’s In-Orbit Technology Demonstration Programme. The P2SC is hosted at the Royal Observatory of Belgium, co-located with both Principal Investigator teams. The P2SC tasks cover science planning, instrument commanding, instrument monitoring, data processing, support of outreach activities, and distribution of science data products. PROBA missions aim for a high degree of autonomy at mission and system level, including the science operations centre. The autonomy and flexibility of the P2SC is reached by a set of web-based interfaces allowing the operators as well as the instrument teams to monitor quasi-continuously the status of the operations, allowing a quick reaction to solar events. In addition, several new concepts are implemented at instrument, spacecraft, and ground-segment levels allowing a high degree of flexibility in the operations of the instruments. This article explains the key concepts of the P2SC, emphasising the automation and the flexibility achieved in the commanding as well as the data-processing chain. 相似文献
6.
R. Brajša H. Wöhl D. Ruždjak B. Vršnak G. Verbanac L. Svalgaard J.-F. Hochedez 《Astronomische Nachrichten》2007,328(10):1013-1015
The interaction between differential rotation and magnetic fields in the solar convection zone was recently modelled by Brun (2004). One consequence of that model is that the Maxwell stresses can oppose the Reynolds stresses, and thus contribute to the transport of the angular momentum towards the solar poles, leading to a reduced differential rotation. So, when magnetic fields are weaker, a more pronounced differential rotation can be expected, yielding a higher rotation velocity at low latitudes taken on the average. This hypothesis is consistent with the behaviour of the solar rotation during the Maunder minimum. In this work we search for similar signatures of the relationship between the solar activity and rotation determined tracing sunspot groups and coronal bright points. We use the extended Greenwich data set (1878–1981) and a series of full-disc solar images taken at 28.4 nm with the EIT instrument on the SOHO spacecraft (1998–2000). We investigate the dependence of the solar rotation on the solar activity (described by the relative sunspot number) and the interplanetary magnetic field (calculated from the interdiurnal variability index). Possible rotational signatures of two weak solar activity cycles at the beginning of the 20th century (Gleissberg minimum) are discussed. (© 2007 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) 相似文献
7.
J. L. Bertaux E. Kyrölä E. Quémerais R. Pellinen R. Lallement W. Schmidt M. Berthé E. Dimarellis J. P. Goutail C. Taulemesse C. Bernard G. Leppelmeier T. Summanen H. Hannula H. Huomo V. Kehlä S. Korpela K. Leppälä E. Strömmer J. Torsti K. Viherkanto J. F. Hochedez G. Chretiennot R. Peyroux T. Holzer 《Solar physics》1995,162(1-2):403-439
On board the SOHO spacecraft poised at L1 Lagrange point, the SWAN instrument is mainly devoted to the measurement of large scale structures of the solar wind, and in particular the distribution with heliographic latitude of the solar wind mass flux. This is obtained from an intensity map of the sky Lyman emission, which reflects the shape of the ionization cavity carved in the flow of interstellar H atoms by the solar wind. The methodology, inversion procedure and related complications are described. The subject of latitude variation of the solar wind is shortly reviewed: earlier Lyman results from Prognoz in 1976 are confirmed by Ulysses. The importance of the actual value of the solar wind mass flux for the equation of dynamics in a polar coronal hole is stressed. The instrument is composed of one electronic unit commanding two identical Sensor Units, each of them allowing to map a full hemisphere with a resolution of 1°, thanks to a two-mirrors periscope system. The design is described in some details, and the rationale for choice between several variants are discussed. A hydrogen absorption cell is used to measure the shape of the interplanetary Lyman line and other Lyman emissions. Other types of observations are also discussed : the geocorona, comets (old and new), the solar corona, and a possible signature of the heliopause. The connexion with some other SOHO instruments, in particular LASCO, UVCS, SUMER, is briefly discussed. 相似文献
8.
A. Benmoussa J.-F. Hochedez W. K. Schmutz U. SchÜhle M. NeslÁdek Y. Stockman U. Kroth M. Richter A. Theissen Z. Remes K. Haenen V. Mortet S. Koller J. P. Halain R. Petersen M. Dominique M. D’Olieslaeger 《Experimental Astronomy》2003,16(3):141-148
Fabrication, packaging and experimental results on the calibration of metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) photodetectors made on diamond are reported. LYRA (Lyman- RAdiometer onboard PROBA-2) will use diamond detectors for the first time in space for a solar physics instrument. A set of measurement campaigns was designed to obtain the XUV-to-VIS responsivity of the devices and other characterizations. The measurements of responsivity in EUV and VUV spectral ranges (40–240 nm) have been carried out by the Physkalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Germany at the electron storage ring BESSY II. The longer wavelength range from 210 to 1127 nm was measured with monochromatic light by using a Xe-lamp at IMO-IMOMEC. The diamond detectors exhibit a photoresponse which lie in the 35–65 mA/W range at 200 nm (corresponding to an external quantum efficiency of 20–40%) and indicate a visible rejection ratio (200–500 nm) higher than four orders of magnitude. 相似文献
9.
P. C. H. Martens G. D. R. Attrill A. R. Davey A. Engell S. Farid P. C. Grigis J. Kasper K. Korreck S. H. Saar A. Savcheva Y. Su P. Testa M. Wills-Davey P. N. Bernasconi N.-E. Raouafi V. A. Delouille J. F. Hochedez J. W. Cirtain C. E. DeForest R. A. Angryk I. De Moortel T. Wiegelmann M. K. Georgoulis R. T. J. McAteer R. P. Timmons 《Solar physics》2012,275(1-2):79-113
In Fall 2008 NASA selected a large international consortium to produce a comprehensive automated feature-recognition system for the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). The SDO data that we consider are all of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) images plus surface magnetic-field images from the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI). We produce robust, very efficient, professionally coded software modules that can keep up with the SDO data stream and detect, trace, and analyze numerous phenomena, including flares, sigmoids, filaments, coronal dimmings, polarity inversion lines, sunspots, X-ray bright points, active regions, coronal holes, EIT waves, coronal mass ejections (CMEs), coronal oscillations, and jets. We also track the emergence and evolution of magnetic elements down to the smallest detectable features and will provide at least four full-disk, nonlinear, force-free magnetic field extrapolations per day. The detection of CMEs and filaments is accomplished with Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)/Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) and ground-based Hα data, respectively. A?completely new software element is a trainable feature-detection module based on a generalized image-classification algorithm. Such a trainable module can be used to find features that have not yet been discovered (as, for example, sigmoids were in the pre-Yohkoh era). Our codes will produce entries in the Heliophysics Events Knowledgebase (HEK) as well as produce complete catalogs for results that are too numerous for inclusion in the HEK, such as the X-ray bright-point metadata. This will permit users to locate data on individual events as well as carry out statistical studies on large numbers of events, using the interface provided by the Virtual Solar Observatory. The operations concept for our computer vision system is that the data will be analyzed in near real time as soon as they arrive at the SDO Joint Science Operations Center and have undergone basic processing. This will allow the system to produce timely space-weather alerts and to guide the selection and production of quicklook images and movies, in addition to its prime mission of enabling solar science. We briefly describe the complex and unique data-processing pipeline, consisting of the hardware and control software required to handle the SDO data stream and accommodate the computer-vision modules, which has been set up at the Lockheed-Martin Space Astrophysics Laboratory (LMSAL), with an identical copy at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). 相似文献
10.
EIT: Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Telescope for the SOHO mission 总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10
J. -P. Delaboudinière G. E. Artzner J. Brunaud A. H. Gabriel J. F. Hochedez F. Millier X. Y. Song B. Au K. P. Dere R. A. Howard R. Kreplin D. J. Michels J. D. Moses J. M. Defise C. Jamar P. Rochus J. P. Chauvineau J. P. Marioge R. C. Catura J. R. Lemen L. Shing R. A. Stern J. B. Gurman W. M. Neupert A. Maucherat F. Clette P. Cugnon E. L. Van Dessel 《Solar physics》1995,162(1-2):291-312
The Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) will provide wide-field images of the corona and transition region on the solar disc and up to 1.5 R above the solar limb. Its normal incidence multilayer-coated optics will select spectral emission lines from Fe IX (171 ), Fe XII (195 ), Fe XV (284 ), and He II (304 ) to provide sensitive temperature diagnostics in the range from 6 × 104 K to 3 × 106 K. The telescope has a 45 x 45 arcmin field of view and 2.6 arcsec pixels which will provide approximately 5-arcsec spatial resolution. The EIT will probe the coronal plasma on a global scale, as well as the underlying cooler and turbulent atmosphere, providing the basis for comparative analyses with observations from both the ground and other SOHO instruments. This paper presents details of the EIT instrumentation, its performance and operating modes. 相似文献