Cosmic-ray flux predictions and observations for and with Metis on board Solar Orbiter
C. Grimani, V. Andretta, P. Chioetto, V. Da Deppo, M. Fabi, S. Gissot,, G. Naletto, A. Persici, C. Plainaki, M. Romoli, F. Sabbatini, D. Spadaro, M., Stangalini, D. Telloni, M. Uslenghi, E. Antonucci, A. Bemporad, G., Capobianco, G. Capuano, M. Casti, Y. De Leo, S. Fineschi

TL;DR
This study predicts galactic cosmic-ray fluxes for the Solar Orbiter's Metis coronagraph, compares predictions with observations, and assesses cosmic-ray impacts on instrument performance, demonstrating minimal image interference and potential for long-term cosmic-ray monitoring.
Contribution
First comprehensive GCR flux prediction for Metis on Solar Orbiter, validated with in-flight observations, and analysis of cosmic-ray effects on coronagraph imaging performance.
Findings
Cosmic rays affect only a tiny fraction (~10^-4) of image pixels.
Metis images are not significantly impacted by cosmic-ray interactions.
Metis can serve as a proton monitor for GCR variations.
Abstract
The Metis coronagraph is one of the remote sensing instruments hosted on board the ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter mission. Metis is devoted to carry out the first simultaneous imaging of the solar corona in both visible light (VL) and ultraviolet (UV). High-energy particles penetrate spacecraft materials and may limit the performance of on-board instruments. A study of galactic cosmic-ray (GCR) tracks observed in the first VL images gathered by Metis during the commissioning phase for a total of 60 seconds of exposure time is presented here. A similar analysis is planned for the UV channel. A prediction of the GCR flux up to hundreds of GeV is made here for the first part of the Solar Orbiter mission to study the Metis coronagraph performance. GCR model predictions are compared to observations gathered on board Solar Orbiter by the EPD/HET experiment in the range 10 MeV-100 MeV in the summer…
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