The Effects of Spatio-temporal Resolution on Deduced Spicule Properties
Tiago M. D. Pereira (1, 2), Bart De Pontieu (2), Mats Carlsson (3), ((1) NASA Ames Research Center, (2) Lockheed Martin Solar, Astrophysics, Laboratory (3) University of Oslo)

TL;DR
This study examines how spatio-temporal resolution impacts measurements of solar spicules, revealing that lower resolution can significantly alter observed properties and align them with historical data, thus clarifying previous measurement discrepancies.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates how degraded observational data affects spicule property measurements, highlighting the importance of resolution in interpreting solar spicule dynamics.
Findings
Degrading Hinode data reproduces older measurement results.
Resolution significantly influences spicule duration and velocity measurements.
Previous measurements may be misleading due to observational limitations.
Abstract
Spicules have been observed on the sun for more than a century, typically in chromospheric lines such as H-alpha and Ca II H. Recent work has shown that so-called 'type II' spicules may have a role in providing mass to the corona and the solar wind. In chromospheric filtergrams these spicules are not seen to fall back down, and they are shorter-lived and more dynamic than the spicules that have been classically reported in ground-based observations. Observations of type II spicules with Hinode show fundamentally different properties from what was previously measured. In earlier work we showed that these dynamic type II spicules are the most common type, a view that was not properly identified by early observations.The aim of this work is to investigate the effects of spatio-temporal resolution in the classical spicule measurements. Making use of Hinode data degraded to match the…
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