Temperature gradient in the solar photosphere. Test of a new spectroscopic method and study of its feasibility for ground-based telescopes
M. Faurobert, M. Carbillet, L. Marquis, A. Chiavassa, and G. Ricort

TL;DR
This study tests a spectroscopic method for measuring the solar photospheric temperature gradient using high-resolution observations, demonstrating that adaptive optics significantly improves measurement accuracy, enabling long-term ground-based solar studies.
Contribution
The paper introduces a feasible ground-based spectroscopic technique for measuring the solar photospheric temperature gradient, enhanced by adaptive optics correction.
Findings
AO correction drastically improves measurement accuracy.
Degraded images cause bias and loss of precision.
Method is suitable for long-term solar observations.
Abstract
Context. The contribution of quiet-Sun regions to the solar irradiance variability is currently unclear. Some solar-cycle variations of the quiet-Sun physical structure, such as the temperature gradient, might affect the irradiance. The synoptic measurement of this quantity along the activity cycle would improve our understanding of long-term irradiance variations. Aims. We intend to test a method previously introduced for measuring the photospheric temperature gradient from high-resolution spectroscopic observation and to study its feasibility with ground-based instruments with and without adaptative optics. Methods. We used synthetic profiles of the FeI 630.15 nm obtained from realistic three-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of the photospheric granulation and line radiative transfer computations under local thermodynamical equilibrium conditions. Synthetic granulation images at…
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