4.7 Article

First Flight of the EUV Snapshot Imaging Spectrograph (ESIS)

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 938, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac8eaa

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA [NNX14AK71G]
  2. NASA NESSF program [80NSSC17K0524]

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This paper reviews the instrument, mission, and data captured by the Extreme-ultraviolet Snapshot Imaging Spectrograph (ESIS). It demonstrates the unique insights of ESIS in mapping the structure and dynamics of small-scale transient events.
The Extreme-ultraviolet Snapshot Imaging Spectrograph (ESIS) launched on a sounding rocket from White Sands Missile Range on 2019 September 30. ESIS is a computed tomography imaging spectrograph (CTIS) designed to map emission line profiles across a wide field of view, revealing the structure and dynamics of small-scale transient events that are prevalent at transition region temperatures. In this paper, we review the ESIS instrument, mission, and data captured. We demonstrate how this unique data set can be interpreted qualitatively and further present some initial quantitative inversions of the data. Using a multiplicative algebraic reconstruction technique, we combine information from all four ESIS channels into a single spatial-spectral cube at every exposure. We analyze two small explosive events in the O v 629.7 angstrom spectral line with jets near +/- 100 km s(-1) that evolve on 10 s timescales and vary significantly over small spatial scales. Intriguingly, each of these events turns out to be a bimodal (red+blue) jet with outflows that are asymmetric and unsynchronized. We also present a qualitative analysis of a small jetlike eruption captured by ESIS and draw comparisons to previously observed mini-filament eruptions. In 5 minutes of observing time, ESIS captured the spatial and temporal evolution of tens of these small events across the similar to 11.' 5 field of view, as well as several larger extended eruptions, demonstrating the advantage of CTIS instruments over traditional slit spectrographs in capturing the spatial and spectral information of dynamic solar features across large fields of view.

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