High-resolution, high-sensitivity, ground-based solar spectropolarimetry with a new fast imaging polarimeter
F. A. Iglesias, A. Feller, K. Nagaraju, S. K. Solanki

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Fast Solar Polarimeter, a ground-based instrument capable of high-resolution, high-sensitivity spectropolarimetric measurements of the Sun, effectively mitigating atmospheric seeing effects through high cadence and advanced image restoration.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel high-cadence, ground-based polarimeter with optimized modulation and imaging capabilities, enabling rapid, high-quality solar spectropolarimetric data acquisition.
Findings
Achieves 400 fps with low noise and high duty cycle
Reduces seeing-induced crosstalk below noise levels after integration
Provides high-quality measurements every 2 seconds using image restoration
Abstract
Context. Remote sensing of weak and small-scale solar magnetic fields is of utmost relevance for a number of important open questions in solar physics. This requires the acquisition of spectropolarimetric data with high spatial resolution (0.1 arcsec) and low noise (1e-3 to 1e-5 of the continuum intensity). The main limitations to obtain these measurements from the ground, are the degradation of the image resolution produced by atmospheric seeing and the seeing-induced crosstalk (SIC). Aims. We introduce the prototype of the Fast Solar Polarimeter (FSP), a new ground-based, high-cadence polarimeter that tackles the above-mentioned limitations by producing data that are optimally suited for the application of post-facto image restoration, and by operating at a modulation frequency of 100 Hz to reduce SIC. Results. The pnCCD camera reaches 400 fps while keeping a high duty cycle (98.6 %)…
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