An Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph first view on Solar Spicules
T. M. D. Pereira, B. De Pontieu, M. Carlsson, V. Hansteen, T. D., Tarbell, J. Lemen, A. Title, P. Boerner, N. Hurlburt, J. P. W\"ulser, J., Mart\'inez-Sykora, L. Kleint, L. Golub, S. McKillop, K. K. Reeves, S. Saar,, P. Testa, H. Tian, S. Jaeggli, C. Kankelborg

TL;DR
This study uses IRIS observations to analyze solar spicules, revealing that type II spicules undergo rapid heating, continue evolving at higher temperatures, and are key sites of vigorous heating in the solar atmosphere.
Contribution
First IRIS-based detailed analysis of quiet Sun spicules, confirming their rapid heating and evolution, and distinguishing type II from type I spicules.
Findings
Type II spicules undergo rapid heating to transition region temperatures.
IRIS observations show spicules continue evolving after fading in Ca II H.
Type II spicules originate from magnetic network bushes.
Abstract
Solar spicules have eluded modelers and observers for decades. Since the discovery of the more energetic type II, spicules have become a heated topic but their contribution to the energy balance of the low solar atmosphere remains unknown. Here we give a first glimpse of what quiet Sun spicules look like when observed with NASA's recently launched Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). Using IRIS spectra and filtergrams that sample the chromosphere and transition region we compare the properties and evolution of spicules as observed in a coordinated campaign with Hinode and the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly. Our IRIS observations allow us to follow the thermal evolution of type II spicules and finally confirm that the fading of Ca II H spicules appears to be caused by rapid heating to higher temperatures. The IRIS spicules do not fade but continue evolving, reaching higher and…
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