SUNRISE III is the third flight of the international stratospheric balloon project Sunrise. The SUNRISE III carries a 1-meter aperture Gregorian telescope and provides a unique platform to perform seeing-free observations at UV-Visible-IR wavelengths. It is designed in the framework of NASA's long-duration balloon program to be launched at ESRANGE, Sweden, and to fly to Canada at float altitudes of 35 – 37 km. For the third flight, the post-focal instrumentation was extensively upgraded to enhance spectro-polarimetric capability; SUSI for 309 – 417 nm, TuMag for 525 nm and 517 nm, and SCIP for 765 – 855 nm. The gondola was also renewed to achieve stable pointing to a target on the solar surface. The team led by NAOJ provided SCIP through international collaboration with the Spanish and German teams. SUNRISE III was launched in July 2022 but was terminated because of a hardware problem. The telescope and instruments were successfully recovered and will be flown again in June 2024.
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.
The Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimter (SCIP) is an instrument for the third flight of the SUNRISE balloon-borne solar observatory planned for 2022. To verify the high spatial and spectral resolutions required in the balloon flight, the SCIP optical unit was subjected to a thermal-vacuum test in which the SCIP optical unit was installed in a vacuum chamber and was exposed to the thermal environment expected in the flight. We verified the heater control performance and the temperature distribution in the SCIP optical unit and confirmed the optical performance by injecting the laser and white light through a vacuum window.
The SUNRISE Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) is a balloon-borne long-slit spectrograph for SUNRISE III to precisely measure magnetic fields in the solar atmosphere. The scan mirror mechanism (SMM) is installed in the optical path to the entrance slit of the SCIP to move solar images focused on the slit for 2-dimensional mapping. The SMM is required to have (1) the tilt stability better than 0.035″ (3σ) on the sky angle for the diffraction-limited spatial resolution of 0.2″, (2) step response shorter than 32 msec for rapid scanning observations, and (3) good linearity (i.e. step uniformity) over the entire field-of-view (60″x60″). To achieve these performances, we have developed a flight-model mechanism and its electronics, in which the mirror tilt is controlled by electromagnetic actuators with a closed-loop feedback logic with tilt angles from gap-based capacitance sensors. Several optical measurements on the optical bench verified that the mechanism meets the requirements. In particular, the tilt stability achives better than 0.012″ (3σ). Thermal cycling and thermal vacuum tests have been completed to demonstrate the performance in the vacuum and the operational temperature range expected in the balloon flight. We found a small temperature dependence in the step uniformity and this dependence will be corrected to have 2-demensional maps with the sub-arcsec spatial accuracy in the data post-processing.
The Sunrise balloon-borne solar observatory carries a 1 m aperture optical telescope and provides us a unique platform to conduct continuous seeing-free observations at UV-visible-IR wavelengths from an altitude of higher than 35 km. For the next flight planned for 2022, the post-focus instrumentation is upgraded with new spectro- polarimeters for the near UV (SUSI) and the near-IR (SCIP), whereas the imaging spectro-polarimeter Tunable Magnetograph (TuMag) is capable of observing multiple spectral lines within the visible wavelength. A new spectro-polarimeter called the Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) is under development for observing near-IR wavelength ranges of around 770 nm and 850 nm. These wavelength ranges contain many spectral lines sensitive to solar magnetic fields and SCIP will be able to obtain magnetic and velocity structures in the solar atmosphere with a sufficient height resolution by combining spectro-polarimetric data of these lines. Polarimetric measurements are conducted using a rotating waveplate as a modulator and polarizing beam splitters in front of the cameras. The spatial and spectral resolutions are 0.2" and 2 105, respectively, and a polarimetric sensitivity of 0.03 % (1σ) is achieved within a 10 s integration time. To detect minute polarization signals with good precision, we carefully designed the opto-mechanical system, polarization optics and modulation, and onboard data processing.
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