Metis: the Solar Orbiter visible light and ultraviolet coronal imager
Ester Antonucci, Marco Romoli, Vincenzo Andretta, Silvano Fineschi,, Petr Heinzel, J. Daniel Moses, Giampiero Naletto, Gianalfredo Nicolini,, Daniele Spadaro, Luca Teriaca, Arkadiusz Berlicki, Gerardo Capobianco,, Giuseppe Crescenzio, Vania Da Deppo, Mauro Focardi

TL;DR
Metis is a pioneering solar coronagraph on Solar Orbiter that captures simultaneous high-resolution images of the solar corona in visible and UV light, enabling detailed studies of coronal structures and dynamics from close proximity.
Contribution
This paper introduces Metis, the first space-based coronagraph capable of simultaneous visible and UV imaging of the solar corona with unprecedented resolution and vantage points.
Findings
First simultaneous visible and UV imaging of the solar corona from space.
High spatial resolution images with 2000 km (visible) and 15000 km (UV) scales.
Temporal resolution of 1 second for coronal fluctuations.
Abstract
Metis is the first solar coronagraph designed for a space mission capable of performing simultaneous imaging of the off-limb solar corona in both visible and UV light. The observations obtained with Metis aboard the Solar Orbiter ESA-NASA observatory will enable us to diagnose, with unprecedented temporal coverage and spatial resolution, the structures and dynamics of the full corona from 1.7 to about 9 . Due to the uniqueness of the Solar Orbiter mission profile, Metis will be able to observe the solar corona from a close vantage point (down to 0.28 AU), achieving out-of-ecliptic views with the increase of the orbit inclination over time. Moreover, observations near perihelion, during the phase of lower rotational velocity of the solar surface relative to the spacecraft, will allow longer-term studies of the coronal features. Thanks to a novel occultation design and…
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