Disambiguation of Vector Magnetograms by Stereoscopic Observations from the Solar Orbiter/Polarimetric and Helioseismic Imager (PHI) and the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO)/Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI)
Gherardo Valori (1, 2), Philipp L\"oschel (1), David Stansby (2),, Etienne Pariat (3, 4), Johann Hirzberger (1), Feng Chen (5) ((1), Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Sonnensystemforschung, (2) University College, London, Mullard Space Science Laboratory, (3) Laboratoire de Physique des

TL;DR
This paper introduces a stereoscopic disambiguation method (SDM) for resolving the 180° ambiguity in vector magnetograms using observations from Solar Orbiter and SDO, demonstrating high accuracy in various simulated conditions.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel stereoscopic disambiguation method (SDM) and thoroughly tests its accuracy across idealized and realistic solar magnetic field simulations.
Findings
SDM achieves 100% accuracy on well-resolved fields.
Accuracy ranges from 82% to 98% for under-resolved quiet Sun magnetograms.
Accuracy depends on the satellite's orbit and the observed field's scale.
Abstract
Spectropolarimetric reconstructions of the photospheric vector magnetic field are intrinsically limited by the so-called 180 ambiguity in the orientation of the transverse component. The successful launch and operation of Solar Orbiter has made the removal of the 180 ambiguity possible using solely observations obtained from two different vantage points. While the exploitation of such a possibility is straightforward in principle, it is less so in practice and it is therefore important to assess the accuracy and limitations, as a function of both the satellites orbits and measurement principles. In this work we present a stereoscopic disambiguation method (SDM) and discuss a thorough testing of its accuracy in applications to modeled active regions and quiet Sun observations. In a first series of tests, we employ magnetograms extracted from three different numerical…
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