Stereoscopy of extreme UV quiet Sun brightenings observed by Solar Orbiter/EUI
A. N. Zhukov, M. Mierla, F. Auch\`ere, S. Gissot, L. Rodriguez, E., Soubri\'e, W. T. Thompson, B. Inhester, B. Nicula, P. Antolin, S. Parenti,, \'E. Buchlin, K. Barczynski, C. Verbeeck, E. Kraaikamp, P. J. Smith, K., Stegen, L. Dolla, L. Harra, D. M. Long, U. Sch\"uhle

TL;DR
This study uses simultaneous high-resolution EUV observations from Solar Orbiter and SDO to perform the first stereoscopic 3D reconstruction of small-scale quiet Sun brightenings, revealing their heights and internal structures.
Contribution
It introduces the first stereoscopy of small-scale quiet Sun brightenings, combining data from Solar Orbiter and SDO for 3D analysis.
Findings
Campfires are located between 1000 km and 5000 km above the photosphere.
Stereoscopy confirms the small-scale structures are likely small loops heated to coronal temperatures.
High-resolution 3D reconstruction of quiet Sun brightenings is now feasible.
Abstract
The 3D fine structure of the solar atmosphere is still not fully understood as most of the available observations are taken from a single vantage point. The goal of the paper is to study the 3D distribution of small-scale brightening events ("campfires") discovered in the EUV quiet Sun by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) aboard Solar Orbiter. We used a first commissioning data set acquired by the EUI's High Resolution EUV telescope on 30 May 2020 in the 174 {\AA} passband and we combined it with simultaneous data taken by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) aboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory in a similar 171 {\AA} passband. The two-pixel spatial resolution of the two telescopes is 400 km and 880 km, respectively, which is sufficient to identify the campfires in both data sets. The two spacecraft had an angular separation of around 31.5 degrees (essentially in heliographic…
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