Two-dimensional solar spectropolarimetry with the KIS/IAA Visible Imaging Polarimeter
C. Beck, L.R. Bellot Rubio, T.J. Kentischer, A. Tritschler, J.C. del, Toro Iniesta

TL;DR
The paper introduces VIP, a new high-resolution solar spectropolarimeter that enhances the TESOS spectrometer, enabling detailed magnetic field measurements of the solar atmosphere with high spatial and spectral resolution.
Contribution
VIP is a novel instrument that upgrades TESOS into a full vector polarimeter, providing high-resolution, multi-wavelength spectropolarimetric capabilities for solar magnetic field studies.
Findings
VIP achieves a spatial resolution better than 0.5".
It can sample spectral lines at 40 positions in 60 seconds.
Magnetic structures show distinct polarization patterns.
Abstract
Spectropolarimetry at high spatial and spectral resolution is a basic tool to characterize the magnetic properties of the solar atmosphere. We introduce the KIS/IAA Visible Imaging Polarimeter (VIP), a new post-focus instrument that upgrades the TESOS spectrometer at the German VTT into a full vector polarimeter. VIP is a collaboration between the KIS and the IAA. We describe the optical setup of VIP, the data acquisition procedure, and the calibration of the spectropolarimetric measurements. We show examples of data taken between 2005 and 2008 to illustrate the potential of the instrument. VIP is capable of measuring the four Stokes profiles of spectral lines in the range from 420 to 700 nm with a spatial resolution better than 0.5". Lines can be sampled at 40 wavelength positions in 60 s, achieving a noise level of about 2 x 10E-3 with exposure times of 300 ms and pixel sizes of 0.17"…
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