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    The European Solar Telescope
    (Les Ulis : EDP Sciences, 2022) Quintero Noda, C.; Schlichenmaier, R.; Bellot Rubio, L.R.; Löfdahl, M.G.; Khomenko, E.; Jurčák, J.; Leenaarts, J.; Kuckein, C.; González Manrique, S.J.; Gunár, S.; Nelson, C.J.; Giovannelli, L.; González, F.; González, J.B.; González-Cava, J.M.; González García, M.; Gömöry, P.; Gracia, F.; Grauf, B.; Greco, V.; Grivel, C.; de la Cruz Rodríguez, J.; Guerreiro, N.; Guglielmino, S.L.; Hammerschlag, R.; Hanslmeier, A.; Hansteen, V.; Heinzel, P.; Hernández-Delgado, A.; Hernández Suárez, E.; Hidalgo, S.L.; Hill, F.; Tziotziou, K.; Hizberger, J.; Hofmeister, S.; Jägers, A.; Janett, G.; Jarolim, R.; Jess, D.; Jiménez Mejías, D.; Jolissaint, L.; Kamlah, R.; Kapitán, J.; Tsiropoula, G.; Kašparová, J.; Keller, C.U.; Kentischer, T.; Kiselman, D.; Kleint, L.; Klvana, M.; Kontogiannis, I.; Krishnappa, N.; Kučera, A.; Labrosse, N.; Aulanier, G.; Lagg, A.; Landi Degl’Innocenti, E.; Langlois, M.; Lafon, M.; Laforgue, D.; Le Men, C.; Lepori, B.; Lepreti, F.; Lindberg, B.; Lilje, P.B.; Aboudarham, J.; López Ariste, A.; López Fernández, V.A.; López Jiménez, A.C.; López López, R.; Manso Sainz, R.; Marassi, A.; Marco de la Rosa, J.; Marino, J.; Marrero, J.; Martín, A.; Allegri, D.; Martín Gálvez, A.; Martín Hernando, Y.; Masciadri, E.; Martínez González, M.; Matta-Gómez, A.; Mato, A.; Mathioudakis, M.; Matthews, S.; Mein, P.; Merlos García, F.; Alsina Ballester, E.; Moity, J.; Montilla, I.; Molinaro, M.; Molodij, G.; Montoya, L.M.; Munari, M.; Murabito, M.; Núñez Cagigal, M.; Oliviero, M.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Amans, J.P.; Ortiz, A.; Padilla-Hernández, C.; Paéz Mañá, E.; Paletou, F.; Pancorbo, J.; Pastor Cañedo, A.; Pastor Yabar, A.; Peat, A.W.; Pedichini, F.; Peixinho, N.; Asensio Ramos, A.; Peñate, J.; Pérez de Taoro, A.; Peter, H.; Petrovay, K.; Piazzesi, R.; Pietropaolo, E.; Pleier, O.; Poedts, S.; Pötzi, W.; Podladchikova, T.; Bailén, F.J.; Prieto, G.; Quintero Nehrkorn, J.; Ramelli, R.; Ramos Sapena, Y.; Rasilla, J.L.; Reardon, K.; Rebolo, R.; Regalado Olivares, S.; Reyes García-Talavera, M.; Riethmüller, T.L.; Balaguer, M.; Rimmele, T.; Rodríguez Delgado, H.; Rodríguez González, N.; Rodríguez-Losada, J.A.; Rodríguez Ramos, L.F.; Romano, P.; Roth, M.; Rouppe van der Voort, L.; Rudawy, P.; Ruiz de Galarreta, C.; Baldini, V.; Rybák, J.; Salvade, A.; Sánchez-Capuchino, J.; Sánchez Rodríguez, M.L.; Sangiorgi, M.; Sayède, F.; Scharmer, G.; Scheiffelen, T.; Schmidt, W.; Schmieder, B.; Balthasar, H.; Scirè, C.; Scuderi, S.; Siegel, B.; Sigwarth, M.; Simões, P.J.A.; Snik, F.; Sliepen, G.; Sobotka, M.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Sola La Serna, P.; Barata, T.; Solanki, S. K.; Soler Trujillo, M.; Soltau, D.; Sordini, A.; Sosa Méndez, A.; Stangalini, M.; Steiner, O.; Stenflo, J.O.; Štěpán, J.; Strassmeier, K.G.; Barczynski, K.; Sudar, D.; Suematsu, Y.; Sütterlin, P.; Tallon, M.; Temmer, M.; Tenegi, F.; Tritschler, A.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Turchi, A.; Utz, D.; Barreto Cabrera, M.; van Harten, G.; van Noort, M.; van Werkhoven, T.; Vansintjan, R.; Vaz Cedillo, J.J.; Vega Reyes, N.; Verma, M.; Veronig, A.M.; Viavattene, G.; Vitas, N.; Baur, A.; Vögler, A.; von der Lühe, O.; Volkmer, R.; Waldmann, T.A.; Walton, D.; Wisniewska, A.; Zeman, J.; Zeuner, F.; Zhang, L.Q.; Zuccarello, F.; Béchet, C.; Collados, M.; Beck, C.; Belío-Asín, M.; Bello-González, N.; Belluzzi, L.; Bentley, R.D.; Berdyugina, S.V.; Berghmans, D.; Berlicki, A.; Berrilli, F.; Berkefeld, T.; Bettonvil, F.; Bianda, M.; Bienes Pérez, J.; Bonaque-González, S.; Brajša, R.; Bommier, V.; Bourdin, P.-A.; Burgos Martín, J.; Calchetti, D.; Calcines, A.; Calvo Tovar, J.; Campbell, R.J.; Carballo-Martín, Y.; Carbone, V.; Carlin, E.S.; Carlsson, M.; Castro López, J.; Cavaller, L.; Cavallini, F.; Cauzzi, G.; Cecconi, M.; Chulani, H.M.; Cirami, R.; Consolini, G.; Coretti, I.; Cosentino, R.; Cózar-Castellano, J.; Dalmasse, K.; Danilovic, S.; De Juan Ovelar, M.; Del Moro, D.; del Pino Alemán, T.; del Toro Iniesta, J. C.; Denker, C.; Dhara, S.K.; Di Marcantonio, P.; Díaz Baso, C.J.; Diercke, A.; Dineva, E.; Díaz-García, J.J.; Doerr, H.-P.; Doyle, G.; Erdelyi, R.; Ermolli, I.; Escobar Rodríguez, A.; Esteban Pozuelo, S.; Faurobert, M.; Felipe, T.; Feller, A.; Feijoo Amoedo, N.; Femenía Castellá, B.; Fernandes, J.; Ferro Rodríguez, I.; Figueroa, I.; Fletcher, L.; Franco Ordovas, A.; Gafeira, R.; Gardenghi, R.; Gelly, B.; Giorgi, F.; Gisler, D.
    The European Solar Telescope (EST) is a project aimed at studying the magnetic connectivity of the solar atmosphere, from the deep photosphere to the upper chromosphere. Its design combines the knowledge and expertise gathered by the European solar physics community during the construction and operation of state-of-the-art solar telescopes operating in visible and near-infrared wavelengths: the Swedish 1m Solar Telescope, the German Vacuum Tower Telescope and GREGOR, the French Télescope Héliographique pour l'Étude du Magnétisme et des Instabilités Solaires, and the Dutch Open Telescope. With its 4.2 m primary mirror and an open configuration, EST will become the most powerful European ground-based facility to study the Sun in the coming decades in the visible and near-infrared bands. EST uses the most innovative technological advances: the first adaptive secondary mirror ever used in a solar telescope, a complex multi-conjugate adaptive optics with deformable mirrors that form part of the optical design in a natural way, a polarimetrically compensated telescope design that eliminates the complex temporal variation and wavelength dependence of the telescope Mueller matrix, and an instrument suite containing several (etalon-based) tunable imaging spectropolarimeters and several integral field unit spectropolarimeters. This publication summarises some fundamental science questions that can be addressed with the telescope, together with a complete description of its major subsystems.
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    Observational study of chromospheric heating by acoustic waves
    (Les Ulis : EDP Sciences, 2020) Abbasvand, V.; Sobotka, M.; Švanda, M.; Heinzel, P.; García-Rivas, M.; Denker, C.; Balthasar, H.; Verma, M.; Kontogiannis, I.; Koza, J.; Korda, D.; Kuckein, C.
    Aims. Our aim is to investigate the role of acoustic and magneto-acoustic waves in heating the solar chromosphere. Observations in strong chromospheric lines are analyzed by comparing the deposited acoustic-energy flux with the total integrated radiative losses. Methods. Quiet-Sun and weak-plage regions were observed in the Ca ii 854.2 nm and H lines with the Fast Imaging Solar Spectrograph (FISS) at the 1.6-m Goode Solar Telescope on 2019 October 3 and in the H and H lines with the echelle spectrograph attached to the Vacuum Tower Telescope on 2018 December 11 and 2019 June 6. The deposited acoustic energy flux at frequencies up to 20 mHz was derived from Doppler velocities observed in line centers and wings. Radiative losses were computed by means of a set of scaled non-local thermodynamic equilibrium 1D hydrostatic semi-empirical models obtained by fitting synthetic to observed line profiles. Results. In the middle chromosphere (h = 1000–1400 km), the radiative losses can be fully balanced by the deposited acoustic energy flux in a quiet-Sun region. In the upper chromosphere (h > 1400 km), the deposited acoustic flux is small compared to the radiative losses in quiet as well as in plage regions. The crucial parameter determining the amount of deposited acoustic flux is the gas density at a given height. Conclusions. The acoustic energy flux is e ciently deposited in the middle chromosphere, where the density of gas is su ciently high. About 90% of the available acoustic energy flux in the quiet-Sun region is deposited in these layers, and thus it is a major contributor to the radiative losses of the middle chromosphere. In the upper chromosphere, the deposited acoustic flux is too low, so that other heating mechanisms have to act to balance the radiative cooling.
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    Evolution of the fine structure of magnetic fields in the quiet Sun: Observations from Sunrise/IMaX and extrapolations
    (Heidelberg : Springer, 2013) Wiegelmann, T.; Solanki, S.K.; Borrero, J.M.; Peter, H.; Barthol, P.; Gandorfer, A.; Martínez Pillet, V.; Schmidt, W.; Knölker, M.
    Observations with the balloon-borne Sunrise/Imaging Magnetograph eXperiment (IMaX) provide high spatial resolution (roughly 100 km at disk center) measurements of the magnetic field in the photosphere of the quiet Sun. To investigate the magnetic structure of the chromosphere and corona, we extrapolate these photospheric measurements into the upper solar atmosphere and analyze a 22-minute long time series with a cadence of 33 seconds. Using the extrapolated magnetic-field lines as tracer, we investigate temporal evolution of the magnetic connectivity in the quiet Sun’s atmosphere. The majority of magnetic loops are asymmetric in the sense that the photospheric field strength at the loop foot points is very different. We find that the magnetic connectivity of the loops changes rapidly with a typical connection recycling time of about 3±1 minutes in the upper solar atmosphere and 12±4 minutes in the photosphere. This is considerably shorter than previously found. Nonetheless, our estimate of the energy released by the associated magnetic-reconnection processes is not likely to be the sole source for heating the chromosphere and corona in the quiet Sun.