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New deep coronal spectra from the 2017 total solar eclipse

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors describe a slit spectroscopic experiment to provide an analysis of the most typical parts of the quasi-minimum type corona observed during the total solar eclipse of Aug. 21, 2017 from Idaho, USA.
Abstract
Context. The origin of the high temperature of the solar corona, in both the inner bright parts and the more outer parts showing flows toward the solar wind, is not understood well yet. Total eclipses permit a deep analysis of both the inner and the outer parts of the corona using the continuum white-light (W-L) radiations from electrons (K-corona), the superposed spectrum of forbidden emission lines from ions (E-corona), and the dust component with F-lines (F-corona).Aims. By sufficiently dispersing the W-L spectrum, the Fraunhofer (F) spectrum of the dust component of the corona appears and the continuum Thomson radiation can be evaluated. The superposed emission lines of ions with different degrees of ionization are studied to allow the measurement of temperatures, non-thermal velocities, Doppler shifts, and abundances to constrain the proposed heating mechanisms and understand the origin of flows that lead to solar wind.Methods. We describe a slit spectroscopic experiment of high spectral resolution to provide an analysis of the most typical parts of the quasi-minimum type corona observed during the total solar eclipse of Aug. 21, 2017 from Idaho, USA. Streamers, active region enhancements, and polar coronal holes (CHs) are measured well using deep spectra.Results. Sixty spectra are obtained during the totality with a long slit, covering ±3 solar radii in the range of 510 nm to 590 nm. The K+F continuum corona is exposed well up to two solar radii. The F-corona can be measured even at the solar limb. New weak emission lines were discovered or confirmed. The rarely observed Ar X line is detected almost everywhere; the Fe XIV and Ni XIII lines are clearly detected everywhere. For the first time hot lines are also measured inside the CH regions. The radial variations of the non-thermal turbulent velocities of the lines do not show a great departure from the average values. No significantly large Doppler shifts are seen anywhere in the inner or the middle corona. The wings of the Fe XIV line show some non-Gaussianity.Conclusions. Deep slit coronal spectra offered an opportunity for diagnosing several aspects of coronal physics during a well observed total eclipse without extended investments. The analysis of the ionic emission line profiles offers several powerful diagnostics of the coronal dynamics; the precise measurement of the F-continuum component provides insight into the ubiquitous dust corona at the solar limb.

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Key Aspects of Coronal Heating

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight 10 key aspects of coronal heating that must be understood before we can consider the problem to be solved and highlight the coordination of approaches: observational studies, field-aligned hydrodynamic simulations, large-scale and localized three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulation, and possibly also kinetic simulations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Solar Minimum Eclipse of 2019 July 2. II. The First Absolute Brightness Measurements and MHD Model Predictions of Fe x, xi, and xiv out to 3.4 R ⊙

TL;DR: In this article , the spatially resolved absolute brightness of the Fe x, Fe xi, and Fe xiv visible coronal emission lines from 1.08 to 3.4 R ⊙, observed during the 2019 July 2 total solar eclipse (TSE) was presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coronal Electron Densities Derived with Images Acquired during the 2017 August 21 Total Solar Eclipse

TL;DR: In this article, a method was developed to combine images acquired with 15 different exposure times (from 1/4000 sec to 4 sec), identifying in each pixel the best interval of detector linearity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coronal Densities, Temperatures, and Abundances during the 2019 Total Solar Eclipse: The Role of Multiwavelength Observations in Coronal Plasma Characterization

TL;DR: The Airborne Infrared Spectrometer (AIR-Spec) offers an unprecedented opportunity to explore the near-infrared (NIR) wavelength range and has been used at two total solar eclipses, in 2017 and 2019 as mentioned in this paper .
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Radial distributions of coronal electron Temperatures for Solar Altitudes up to Ten Solar Radii

TL;DR: In this paper, a hydrodynamical model was introduced to calculate the coronal temperature distribution from a given radial electron density, showing that the maximum temperature in the transition region of the corona can be double of the temperature observed at the base.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy release in the solar corona from spatially resolved magnetic braids

TL;DR: Observations of magnetic braids in a coronal active region that are reconnecting, relaxing and dissipating sufficient energy to heat the structures to about 4,000,000 K show that the energy available from the observed field relaxation in this example is ample for the observed heating.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observations of Correlated White-Light and Extreme-Ultraviolet Jets from Polar Coronal Holes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared LASCO images with Fe XII λ195 spectroheliograms made with the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) on SOHO between 1997 April and 1998 February.
Journal ArticleDOI

Key aspects of coronal heating

TL;DR: Significant progress in solving the coronal heating problem will require coordination of approaches: observational studies, field-aligned hydrod dynamic simulations, large-scale and localized three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations, and possibly also kinetic simulations.
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