Probing the physics of the solar atmosphere with the Multi-slit Solar Explorer (MUSE): I. Coronal Heating
Bart De Pontieu, Paola Testa, Juan Martinez-Sykora, Patrick Antolin,, Konstantinos Karampelas, Viggo Hansteen, Matthias Rempel, Mark C. M. Cheung,, Fabio Reale, Sanja Danilovic, Paolo Pagano, Vanessa Polito, Ineke De Moortel,, Daniel Nobrega-Siverio, Tom Van Doorsselaere

TL;DR
MUSE is a proposed high-resolution EUV spectrograph mission that will provide unprecedented spectral and imaging diagnostics of the solar corona, enabling detailed study of coronal heating mechanisms through advanced modeling and multi-instrument synergy.
Contribution
This paper introduces MUSE, a novel multi-slit EUV spectrograph concept, and demonstrates how it will advance understanding of coronal heating by combining high-resolution observations with theoretical models.
Findings
MUSE will capture dynamic coronal plasma evolution at 10-second cadence.
It will constrain physical processes driving coronal heating, flares, and CMEs.
Synergy with other observatories enhances solar atmospheric studies.
Abstract
The Multi-slit Solar Explorer (MUSE) is a proposed NASA MIDEX mission, currently in Phase A, composed of a multi-slit EUV spectrograph (in three narrow spectral bands centered around 171A, 284A, and 108A) and an EUV context imager (in two narrow passbands around 195A and 304A). MUSE will provide unprecedented spectral and imaging diagnostics of the solar corona at high spatial (<0.5 arcsec), and temporal resolution (down to ~0.5s) thanks to its innovative multi-slit design. By obtaining spectra in 4 bright EUV lines (Fe IX 171A , Fe XV 284A, Fe XIX-Fe XXI 108A) covering a wide range of transition region and coronal temperatures along 37 slits simultaneously, MUSE will for the first time be able to "freeze" (at a cadence as short as 10 seconds) with a spectroscopic raster the evolution of the dynamic coronal plasma over a wide range of scales: from the spatial scales on which energy is…
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