Solar stereoscopy - where are we and what developments do we require to progress?
T.Wiegelmann, B. Inhester, and L. Feng

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current state of solar stereoscopy using STEREO spacecraft data, discusses challenges in 3D reconstruction of coronal structures, and proposes future developments including magnetic stereoscopy for better physical parameter estimation.
Contribution
It identifies key challenges in applying classical stereoscopy to faint coronal structures and introduces magnetic stereoscopy as a new method for improved 3D reconstruction.
Findings
Identified difficulties in structure identification and association in stereoscopic solar images.
Demonstrated application of magnetic stereoscopy to active region loops.
Analyzed factors affecting reconstruction accuracy, such as spacecraft separation and structure location.
Abstract
Observations from the two STEREO-spacecraft give us for the first time the possibility to use stereoscopic methods to reconstruct the 3D solar corona. Classical stereoscopy works best for solid objects with clear edges. Consequently an application of classical stereoscopic methods to the faint structures visible in the optically thin coronal plasma is by no means straight forward and several problems have to be treated adequately: 1.)First there is the problem of identifying one dimensional structures -e.g. active region coronal loops or polar plumes- from the two individual EUV-images observed with STEREO/EUVI. 2.) As a next step one has the association problem to find corresponding structures in both images. 3.) Within the reconstruction problem stereoscopic methods are used to compute the 3D-geometry of the identified structures. Without any prior assumptions, e.g., regarding the…
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