7 research outputs found

    SSTRED: A data-processing and metadata-generating pipeline for CHROMIS and CRISP

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    We present a data pipeline for the newly installed SST/CHROMIS imaging spectrometer, as well as for the older SST/CRISP spectropolarimeter. The aim is to provide observers with a user-friendly data pipeline, that delivers science-ready data with the metadata needed for archival. We generalized the CRISPRED data pipeline for multiple instruments and added metadata according to recommendations worked out as part of the SOLARNET project. We made improvements to several steps in the pipeline, including the MOMFBD image restoration. A part of that is a new fork of the MOMFBD program called REDUX, with several new features that are needed in the new pipeline. The CRISPEX data viewer has been updated to accommodate data cubes stored in this format. The pipeline code, as well as REDUX and CRISPEX are all freely available through git repositories or web download. We derive expressions for combining statistics of individual frames into statistics for a set of frames. We define a new extension to the World Coordinate System, that allow us to specify cavity errors as distortions to the spectral coordinate.Comment: Draf

    The Solar Orbiter SPICE instrument: An extreme UV imaging spectrometer

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    Aims. The Spectral Imaging of the Coronal Environment (SPICE) instrument is a high-resolution imaging spectrometer operating at extreme ultraviolet wavelengths. In this paper, we present the concept, design, and pre-launch performance of this facility instrument on the ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter mission. Methods. The goal of this paper is to give prospective users a better understanding of the possible types of observations, the data acquisition, and the sources that contribute to the instrument’s signal. Results. The paper discusses the science objectives, with a focus on the SPICE-specific aspects, before presenting the instrument’s design, including optical, mechanical, thermal, and electronics aspects. This is followed by a characterisation and calibration of the instrument’s performance. The paper concludes with descriptions of the operations concept and data processing. Conclusions. The performance measurements of the various instrument parameters meet the requirements derived from the mission’s science objectives. The SPICE instrument is ready to perform measurements that will provide vital contributions to the scientific success of the Solar Orbiter mission

    Functions, Therapeutic Applications, and Synthesis of Retinoids and Carotenoids

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    Testing General Relativity with Low-Frequency, Space-Based Gravitational-Wave Detectors

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    We review the tests of general relativity that will become possible with space-based gravitational-wave detectors operating in the ∼ 10^{-5} – 1 Hz low-frequency band. The fundamental aspects of gravitation that can be tested include the presence of additional gravitational fields other than the metric; the number and tensorial nature of gravitational-wave polarization states; the velocity of propagation of gravitational waves; the binding energy and gravitational-wave radiation of binaries, and therefore the time evolution of binary inspirals; the strength and shape of the waves emitted from binary mergers and ringdowns; the true nature of astrophysical black holes; and much more. The strength of this science alone calls for the swift implementation of a space-based detector; the remarkable richness of astrophysics, astronomy, and cosmology in the low-frequency gravitational-wave band make the case even stronger

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