PICARD SODISM, a space telescope to study the Sun from the middle ultraviolet to the near infrared
M. Meftah (1), J.-F. Hochedez (1,7), A. Irbah (1), A. Hauchecorne (1),, P. Boumier (2), T. Corbard (3), S. Turck-Chi\`eze (4), P. Assus (3), E., Bertran (1), P. Bourget (8), F. Buisson (5), M. Chaigneau (2), L. Dam\'e (1),, D. Djafer (6), C. Dufour (1), P. Etcheto (5)

TL;DR
PICARD's SODISM space telescope captures multi-wavelength solar images to study solar variability, structure, and its influence on Earth's climate, providing valuable data for solar physics and climate modeling.
Contribution
This paper details the design, expected performance, and initial observations of SODISM, a novel space-based instrument for comprehensive solar imaging and helioseismic studies.
Findings
Successful deployment of SODISM in space.
Initial solar images obtained in five narrow pass bands.
Data supports solar diameter and asphericity analysis.
Abstract
The Solar Diameter Imager and Surface Mapper (SODISM) on board the PICARD space mission provides wide-field images of the photosphere and chromosphere of the Sun in five narrow pass bands (centered at 215.0, 393.37, 535.7, 607.1, and 782.2 nm). PICARD is a space mission, which was successfully launched on 15 June 2010 into a Sun synchronous dawn-dusk orbit. It represents a European asset aiming at collecting solar observations that can serve to estimate some of the inputs to Earth climate models. The scientific payload consists of the SODISM imager and of two radiometers, SOVAP (SOlar VAriability PICARD) and PREMOS (PREcision MOnitor Sensor), which carry out measurements that allow estimating the Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) and the Solar Spectral Irradiance (SSI) from the middle ultraviolet to the red. The SODISM telescope monitors solar activity continuously. It thus produces images…
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