The 2008 August 1 Eclipse Solar-Minimum Corona Unraveled
Jay M. Pasachoff, Vojtech Rusin, Miloslav Druckmuller, Peter Aniol,, Metod Saniga, and Milan Minarovjech

TL;DR
This study presents high-resolution observations of the 2008 August 1 solar eclipse, revealing detailed coronal structures, dynamic motions, and the detection of transient phenomena during an extreme solar minimum.
Contribution
It introduces an original image processing method enabling detection of small-scale coronal features, stars, comets, and CMEs during eclipse observations.
Findings
White-light corona extended up to 20 solar radii with helmet streamers.
Detection of a Kreutz-group comet and a CME with structures less than 1 arcsec.
Observed motions in the corona and prominences over 19-minute intervals.
Abstract
We discuss results stemming from observations of the white-light and [Fe XIV] emission corona during the total eclipse of the Sun of 2008 August 1, in Mongolia (Altaj region) and in Russia (Akademgorodok, Novosibirsk, Siberia). Corresponding to the current extreme solar minimum, the white-light corona, visible up to 20 solar radii, was of a transient type with well-pronounced helmet streamers situated above a chain of prominences at position angles 48, 130, 241 and 322 degrees. A variety of coronal holes, filled with a number of thin polar plumes, were seen around the poles. Furthering an original method of image processing, stars up to 12 magnitude, a Kreutz-group comet (C/2008 O1), and a coronal mass ejection (CME) were also detected, with the smallest resolvable structures being of, and at some places even less than, 1 arcsec. Differences, presumably motions, in the corona and…
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