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The Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)

TLDR
The Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) as discussed by the authors provides multiple simultaneous high-resolution full-disk images of the corona and transition region up to 0.5 R ⊙ above the solar limb with 1.5-arcsec spatial resolution and 12-second temporal resolution.
Abstract
The Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) provides multiple simultaneous high-resolution full-disk images of the corona and transition region up to 0.5 R ⊙ above the solar limb with 1.5-arcsec spatial resolution and 12-second temporal resolution. The AIA consists of four telescopes that employ normal-incidence, multilayer-coated optics to provide narrow-band imaging of seven extreme ultraviolet (EUV) band passes centered on specific lines: Fe xviii (94 A), Fe viii, xxi (131 A), Fe ix (171 A), Fe xii, xxiv (193 A), Fe xiv (211 A), He ii (304 A), and Fe xvi (335 A). One telescope observes C iv (near 1600 A) and the nearby continuum (1700 A) and has a filter that observes in the visible to enable coalignment with images from other telescopes. The temperature diagnostics of the EUV emissions cover the range from 6×104 K to 2×107 K. The AIA was launched as a part of NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) mission on 11 February 2010. AIA will advance our understanding of the mechanisms of solar variability and of how the Sun’s energy is stored and released into the heliosphere and geospace.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for the magnetic breakout model in an equatorial coronal-hole jet.

TL;DR: In this article, an equatorial coronal-hole jet was observed by the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/AIA (Atmospheric Imaging Assembly)) on 2014 January 9 in which the magnetic-field structure was consistent with the embedded-bipole topology that was identified and modeled previously as an origin of coronal jets.
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Estimation of a Coronal Mass Ejection Magnetic Field Strength using Radio Observations of Gyrosynchrotron Radiation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported an unusually large source of gyrosynchrotron radiation in the form of a type IV radio burst associated with a CME occurring on 2014-September-01, observed using instrumentation from the Nancay Radio Astronomy Facility.
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3D Whole-Prominence Fine Structure Modeling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the first 3D whole-prominence fine structure model, which combines a 3D magnetic field configuration of an entire prominence obtained from nonlinear force-free field simulations, with a detailed description of the prominence plasma.
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Magnetic Flux Cancellation as the Trigger Mechanism of Solar Coronal Jets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the magnetic cause of coronal jet eruptions and measured the base size and the duration of each jet using routines in SolarSoft IDL and found that each of these jets resulted from minifilament eruption triggered by flux cancellation at the neutral line.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

CHIANTI - an atomic database for emission lines - I. Wavelengths greater than 50 Å

TL;DR: The CHIANTI database as mentioned in this paper is a set of atomic data and transition probabilities necessary to calculate the emission line spectrum of astrophysical plasmas, including atomic energy levels, atomic radiative data such as wavelengths, weighted oscillator strengths and A values, and electron collisional excitation rates.
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The X-Ray Telescope (XRT) for the Hinode Mission

TL;DR: The X-ray Telescope (XRT) of the Hinode mission as mentioned in this paper provides an unprecedented combination of spatial and temporal resolution in solar coronal studies, and the high sensitivity and broad dynamic range of XRT, coupled with the spacecraft's onboard memory capacity and the planned downlink capability, will permit a broad range of solar studies over an extended period of time for targets ranging from quiet Sun to X-flares.
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