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27 April 2019 Instrumentation for solar spectropolarimetry: state of the art and prospects
Author Affiliations +
Funded by: Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (National Scientific and Technical Research Council), Universidad Tecnológica Nacional
Abstract

Given its unchallenged capabilities in terms of sensitivity and spatial resolution, the combination of imaging spectropolarimetry and numeric Stokes inversion represents the dominant technique currently used to remotely sense the physical properties of the solar atmosphere and, in particular, its important driving magnetic field. Solar magnetism manifests itself in a wide range of spatial, temporal, and energetic scales. The ubiquitous but relatively small and weak fields of the so-called quiet Sun are believed today to be crucial for answering many open questions in solar physics, some of which have substantial practical relevance due to the strong Sun–Earth connection. However, such fields are very challenging to detect because they require spectropolarimetric measurements with high spatial (sub-arcsec), spectral (<100  mÅ), and temporal (<10  s) resolution along with high polarimetric sensitivity (<0.1  %   of the intensity). We collect and discuss both well-established and upcoming instrumental solutions developed during the last decades to push solar observations toward the above-mentioned parameter regime. This typically involves design trade-offs due to the high dimensionality of the data and signal-to-noise-ratio considerations, among others. We focus on the main three components that form a spectropolarimeter, namely, wavelength discriminators, the devices employed to encode the incoming polarization state into intensity images (polarization modulators), and the sensor technologies used to register them. We consider the instrumental solutions introduced to perform this kind of measurements at different optical wavelengths and from various observing locations, i.e., ground-based, from the stratosphere or near space.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Francisco A. Iglesias and Alex J. Feller "Instrumentation for solar spectropolarimetry: state of the art and prospects," Optical Engineering 58(8), 082417 (27 April 2019). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.OE.58.8.082417
Received: 9 December 2018; Accepted: 2 April 2019; Published: 27 April 2019
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Cited by 29 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Polarimetry

Polarization

Sensors

Modulation

Modulators

Spatial resolution

CMOS sensors

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