Oct 27 – 31, 2025
Europe/Stockholm timezone

Coronal polarised brightness throughout solar cycle 25 as measured by Solar Orbiter/Metis

Not scheduled
15m
Mon 27/10, Tue 28/10, Wed 29/10: Idun; Thu 30/10: Tonsalen

Mon 27/10, Tue 28/10, Wed 29/10: Idun; Thu 30/10: Tonsalen

Poster SWR2 - Interdisciplinary Insights into Space Weather Events of Solar Cycle 25: From Solar Origins to Planetary Impacts SWR2 – Interdisciplinary Insights into Space Weather Events of Solar Cycle 25: From Solar Origins to Planetary Impacts

Speaker

Marco Romoli (Università di Firenze)

Description

Metis, the coronagraph on board Solar Orbiter, is an externally occulted instrument with a field of view (FOV) spanning 1.7°–3.4°, which, over the course of a typical spacecraft orbit, corresponds to heliocentric distances from 1.7 to about 10 solar radii. Metis operates with two radiometric channels: one measures coronal emission in a narrow ultraviolet (UV) band centered on the H I Lyman-α line, while the other records broadband visible light (VL) in linearly polarized intensity.

In this work, we present a statistical analysis of the linearly polarized brightness (pB) measured over Solar Cycle 25 as a function of heliocentric height and polar angle, based on the updated Metis calibration released with Data Release 2. We also compare these results with published pB values obtained from eclipse observations, as well as from both ground-based and space-borne coronagraphs.

Primary author

Marco Romoli (Università di Firenze)

Co-authors

Dr Aleksandr Burtovoi (University of Florence) Dr Emanuele Arra (University of Florence, Italy) Metis Team Roberto Susino (INAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di Torino) Silvio Matteo Giordano (INAF Astrophysical Observatory of Turin)

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