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Instrument concepts for the observation of prominences with future ground-based telescopes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2014

A. López Ariste*
Affiliation:
THEMIS - CNRS UPS 853 C/Vía Láctea s/n 38205 - La Laguna, Spain email: arturo@themis.iac.es
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Abstract

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The observation of prominences with ground-based telescopes suffers from poor image quality due to atmospheric turbulence when compared with space-borne instruments which, for solar observations, are of similar apertures. To make ground-based instruments competitive, they should rely on spectropolarimetry and the measurement of prominence magnetic fields, a task which no foreseable space instrument will perform. But spectropolarimetry alone does not suffice, and we argue that future instrumentation should combine it with imaging in a large field of view and good temporal resolution. We place numbers on those requirements and give examples of instrumental accomplishments already at work today that forecast a new generation of instruments for the observation of prominences from ground-based telescopes.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2013 

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