Observables Processing for the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager Instrument on the Solar Dynamics Observatory
Sebastien Couvidat, Jesper Schou, J. Todd Hoeksema, Rick S. Bogart,, Rock I. Bush, Tom L. Duvall, Yang Liu, Aimee A. Norton, Philip H. Scherrer

TL;DR
This paper details the processing, calibration, and analysis of solar observables from NASA's HMI instrument on SDO, emphasizing data quality, correction procedures, and ongoing calibration updates over five years.
Contribution
It introduces optimized processing pipelines for HMI data, discusses calibration updates, and addresses systematic errors affecting solar observable measurements.
Findings
HMI data quality exceeds original specifications.
Calibration procedures effectively monitor instrument changes.
Systematic errors mainly due to spacecraft velocity remain.
Abstract
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) was launched 11 February 2010 with 3 instruments on board, including the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI). Since beginning normal operations on 1 May 2010, HMI has observed the Sun's entire visible disk almost continuously. HMI collects sequences of polarized filtergrams taken at a fixed cadence with two 4096 x 4096 cameras from which are computed arcsecond-resolution maps of photospheric observables: the line-of-sight (LoS) velocity and magnetic field, continuum intensity, line width, line depth, and the Stokes polarization parameters, I Q U V, at 6 wavelengths. Two processing pipelines implemented at the SDO Joint Science Operations Center (JSOC) at Stanford University compute observables from calibrated Level-1 filtergrams. One generates LoS quantities every 45s, and the other, primarily for the vector magnetic field, computes averages on…
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