High-speed data processing onboard sunrise chromospheric infrared spectropolarimeter for the SUNRISE III balloon telescope

DOI: 
10.1117/1.JATIS.9.3.034003
Publication date: 
11/07/2023
Main author: 
Kubo, Masahito
IAA authors: 
Sánchez Gómez, Antonio;Balaguer Jimenéz, María.;Orozco Suárez, David;Morales Fernández, José M.;Aparicio del Moral, Beatriz;Moreno Mantas, Antonio J.;Bailón Martínez, Eduardo;del Toro Iniesta, Jose Carlos
Authors: 
Kubo, Masahito;Katsukawa, Yukio;Hernández Expósito, David;Sánchez Gómez, Antonio;Balaguer Jimenéz, María.;Orozco Suárez, David;Morales Fernández, José M.;Aparicio del Moral, Beatriz;Moreno Mantas, Antonio J.;Bailón Martínez, Eduardo;del Toro Iniesta, Jose Carlos;Kawabata, Yusuke;Quintero Noda, Carlos;Oba, Takayoshi;Ishikawa, Ryohtaroh T.;Shimizu, Toshifumi
Journal: 
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
9
Pages: 
034003
Abstract: 
The Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) has been developed for the third flight of the SUNRISE balloon-borne stratospheric solar observatory. The aim of the SCIP is to reveal the evolution of three-dimensional magnetic fields in the solar photosphere and chromosphere using spectropolarimetric measurements with a polarimetric precision of 0.03% (1σ). Multiple lines in the 770 and 850 nm wavelength bands are simultaneously observed with two 2 k × 2 k CMOS cameras at a frame rate of 31.25 Hz. Stokes profiles are calculated onboard by accumulating the images modulated by a polarization modulation unit, and then compression processes are applied to the two-dimensional maps of the Stokes profiles. This onboard data processing effectively reduces the data rate. SCIP electronics can handle large data formats at high speed. Before the implementation into the flight SCIP electronics, a performance verification of the onboard data processing was performed with synthetic SCIP data that were produced with a numerical simulation modeling the solar atmospheres. Finally, we verified that the high-speed onboard data processing was realized on ground with the flight hardware using images illuminated by natural sunlight or an LED light.
Database: 
ADS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2023JATIS...9c4003K/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2023JATIS...9c4003K
Keywords: 
infrared radiation;infrared spectroscopy;polarization;magnetism;solar processes;Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics;Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics