Solar photospheric velocities measured in space: a comparison between SO/PHI-HRT and SDO/HMI
D. Calchetti, K. Albert, F.J. Bail\'en, J. Blanco Rodr\'iguez, J.S. Castellanos Dur\'an, A. Feller, A. Gandorfer, J. Hirzberger, J. Sinjan, X. Li, T. Oba, D. Orozco S\'uarez, T.L. Riethm\"uller, J. Schou, S.K. Solanki, H. Strecker, A. Ulyanov, G. Valori

TL;DR
This study compares solar photospheric velocity measurements from SO/PHI-HRT and SDO/HMI, finding high correlation and consistency between the two instruments during a rare observational alignment.
Contribution
It provides the first direct pixel-by-pixel comparison of LoS velocity data from SO/PHI-HRT and SDO/HMI, validating their measurement consistency.
Findings
92% correlation between instruments' velocity measurements
Linear relation with a slope of 0.96 between datasets
Signals form at similar heights with a 7±14 km separation
Abstract
The Polarimetric and Helioseismic Imager (SO/PHI) onboard Solar Orbiter is a spectropolarimeter scanning the Fe I line at 617.3 nm, providing data of the solar photosphere. The same line is sampled by the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and many other on-ground instruments. In this paper, we aim at assessing the consistency between line-of-sight (LoS) velocity measurements from the two instruments. Reliable measurements of up and down flows from SO/PHI are crucial and unique when Solar Orbiter is facing the far side of the Sun. Also, a combination of measurements from two vantage points to study horizontal flows must rely on consistent observations. For this purpose, we compare the LoS velocity measured by SO/PHI's High Resolution Telescope (SO/PHI-HRT) and SDO/HMI on 29 March 2023, when Solar Orbiter was crossing the Sun-Earth line…
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