Sunrise III: Overview of Observatory and Instruments
Andreas Korpi-Lagg, Achim Gandorfer, Sami K. Solanki, Jose Carlos del Toro Iniesta, Yukio Katsukawa, Pietro Bernasconi, Thomas Berkefeld, Alex Feller, Tino L. Riethm\"uller, Alberto \'Alvarez-Herrero, Masahito Kubo, Valent\'in Mart\'inez Pillet, H. N. Smitha

TL;DR
Sunrise III is a highly upgraded solar observatory that conducted its third successful flight in 2024, featuring advanced instruments to capture detailed, three-dimensional, polarimetric data of the solar atmosphere across multiple spectral regions.
Contribution
The paper presents the design, instrumentation, and successful deployment of Sunrise III, enhancing solar observation capabilities with new instruments and improved stability for comprehensive atmospheric analysis.
Findings
Successful 6.5-day flight with stable observations
New instruments capture previously unexplored spectral regions
Enhanced stability enables detailed 3D solar atmosphere imaging
Abstract
In July 2024, Sunrise completed its third successful science flight. The Sunrise III observatory had been upgraded significantly after the two previous successful flights in 2009 and 2013. Three completely new instruments focus on the small-scale physical processes and their complex interaction from the deepest observable layers in the photosphere up to chromospheric heights. Previously poorly explored spectral regions and lines are exploited to paint a three-dimensional picture of the solar atmosphere with unprecedented completeness and level of detail. The full polarimetric information is captured by all three instruments to reveal the interaction between the magnetic fields and the hydrodynamic processes. Two slit-based spectropolarimeters, the Sunrise UV Spectropolarimeter and Imager (SUSI) and the Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectro-Polarimeter (SCIP), focus on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy
