Bibcode
Gandorfer, A. M.; Solanki, S. K.; Barthol, P.; Lites, B. W.; Martínez Pillet, V.; Schmidt, W.; Soltau, D.; Title, A. M.
Bibliographical reference
Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes. Edited by Stepp, Larry M.. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 6267, pp. 62670S (2006).
Advertised on:
7
2006
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Description
SUNRISE is an international project for the development, construction,
and operation of a balloon-borne solar telescope with an aperture of 1
m, working in the UV/VIS spectral domain. The main scientific goal of
SUNRISE is to understand the structure and dynamics of the magnetic
field in the atmosphere of the Sun. SUNRISE will provide near
diffraction-limited images of the photosphere and chromosphere with an
unpredecented resolution down to 35 km on the solar surface at
wavelengths around 220 nm. The focal-plane instrumentation consists of a
polarization sensitive spectrograph, a Fabry-Perot filter magnetograph,
and a phase-diverse filter imager working in the near UV. The first
stratospheric long-duration balloon flight of SUNRISE is planned in
Summer 2009 from the swedish ESRANGE station. SUNRISE is a joint project
of the german Max-Planck-Institut fur Sonnensystemforschung (MPS),
Katlenburg-Lindau, with the Kiepenheuer-Institut fur Sonnenphysik (KIS),
Freiburg, Germany, the High-Altitude Observatory (HAO), Boulder, USA,
the Lockheed-Martin Solar and Astrophysics Lab. (LMSAL), Palo Alto, USA,
and the spanish IMaX consortium. In this paper we will present an actual
update on the mission and give a brief description of its scientific and
technological aspects.