IRIS Observations of Spicules and Structures Near the Solar Limb
C. E. Alissandrakis, J.-C. Vial, A. Koukras, E. Buchlin, and M., Chane-Yook

TL;DR
This study analyzes IRIS observations of the solar limb, providing detailed spectral profiles, formation heights, and physical parameters of the solar atmosphere from the chromosphere to the transition region, revealing spicule dynamics and atmospheric homogeneity.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analysis of IRIS spectral data near the solar limb, including calibration, formation heights, and physical parameters, enhancing understanding of spicule structures and solar atmospheric layers.
Findings
Low forming lines show no spicule-related temporal variations.
A linear relationship exists between limb position and intensity scale height.
Electron temperatures range from ~8000 K to ~20000 K with turbulent velocities around 24 km/s.
Abstract
We have analyzed IRIS spectral and slit-jaw observations of a quiet region near the South Pole. In this article we present an overview of the observations, the corrections, and the absolute calibration of the intensity. We focus on the average profiles of strong (Mg ii h and k, C ii and Si iv), as well as of weak spectral lines in the near ultraviolet (NUV) and the far ultraviolet (FUV), including the Mg ii triplet, thus probing the solar atmosphere from the low chromosphere to the transition region. We give the radial variation of bulk spectral parameters as well as line ratios and turbulent velocities. We present measurements of the formation height in lines and in the NUV continuum, from which we find a linear relationship between the position of the limb and the intensity scale height. We also find that low forming lines, such as the Mg ii triplet, show no temporal variations above…
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