4.7 Article

The Spectral Content of SDO/AIA 1600 and 1700Å Filters from Flare and Plage Observations

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 870, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aaf28d

Keywords

Sun: atmosphere; Sun: chromosphere; Sun: flares; Sun: photosphere; Sun: UV radiation

Funding

  1. University of Glasgow's Lord Kelvin Adam Smith Leadership Fellowship
  2. Science and Technologies Facilities Council [ST/N004981/1]
  3. UK's Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/P000533/1]
  4. European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) [606862]
  5. STFC [ST/L000741/1, ST/P000533/1, ST/N004981/1, ST/N004981/2] Funding Source: UKRI

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The strong enhancement of the ultraviolet emission during solar flares is usually taken as an indication of plasma heating in the lower solar atmosphere caused by the deposition of the energy released during these events. Images taken with broadband ultraviolet filters by the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer and Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA; 1600 and 1700 angstrom) have revealed the morphology and evolution of flare ribbons in great detail. However, the spectral content of these images is still largely unknown. Without knowledge of the spectral contribution to these UV filters, the use of these rich imaging data sets is severely limited. Aiming to solve this issue, we estimate the spectral contributions of the AIA UV flare and plage images using high-resolution spectra in the range 1300-1900 angstrom from the Skylab NRL SO82B spectrograph. We find that the flare excess emission in AIA 1600 angstrom is dominated by the C IV 1550 angstrom doublet (26%), Si I continua (20%), with smaller contributions from many other chromospheric lines such as C I 1561 and 1656 angstrom multiplets, He II 1640 angstrom, and Si II 1526 and 1533 angstrom. For the AIA 1700 angstrom band, the C I 1656 angstrom multiplet is the main contributor (38%), followed by He II 1640 (17%), and accompanied by a multitude of other, weaker chromospheric lines, with minimal contribution from the continuum. Our results can be generalized to state that the AIA UV flare excess emission is of chromospheric origin, while plage emission is dominated by photospheric continuum emission in both channels.

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