First observations from the SPICE EUV spectrometer on Solar Orbiter
A. Fludra, M. Caldwell, A. Giunta, T. Grundy, S. Guest, S. Leeks, S., Sidher, F. Auch\`ere, M. Carlsson, D. Hassler, H. Peter, R. Aznar Cuadrado,, \'E. Buchlin, S. Caminade, C. DeForest, T. Fredvik, M. Haberreiter, L. Harra,, M. Janvier, T. Kucera, D. M\"uller, S. Parenti

TL;DR
This paper presents initial observations from the SPICE EUV spectrometer on Solar Orbiter, demonstrating its capability to analyze solar atmospheric features across a range of temperatures and revealing bright structures and limb measurements.
Contribution
First science observations from SPICE highlight its ability to capture detailed EUV spectra and images, showcasing new solar features and measurement techniques.
Findings
Identification of over 40 spectral lines from various ions.
Detection of bright, long-lived structures in the quiet Sun network.
First above-limb measurements in multiple EUV lines.
Abstract
We present first science observations taken during the commissioning activities of the Spectral Imaging of the Coronal Environment (SPICE) instrument on the ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter mission. SPICE is a high-resolution imaging spectrometer operating at extreme ultraviolet (EUV) wavelengths. In this paper we illustrate the possible types of observations to give prospective users a better understanding of the science capabilities of SPICE. The paper discusses the first observations of the Sun on different targets and presents an example of the full spectra from the quiet Sun, identifying over 40 spectral lines from neutral hydrogen and ions of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, neon, sulphur, magnesium, and iron. These lines cover the temperature range between 20,000 K and 1 million K (10MK in flares), providing slices of the Sun's atmosphere in narrow temperature intervals. We provide a list of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
