SWAP (instrument)

Sun Watcher using Active Pixel System Detector and Image Processing
An eclipse of the Sun by the moon as seen by SWAP
Alternative names SWAP Edit this at Wikidata
Observatory PROBA-2
Royal Observatory of Belgium Edit this on Wikidata
Telescope style Telescope
astronomical instrument Edit this on Wikidata

The "Sun Watcher using Active Pixel System Detector and Image Processing" (SWAP) telescope is a compact EUV imager on board the PROBA2 mission that will observe the Sun in extreme ultraviolet (EUV). SWAP will provide images of the solar corona at a temperature of roughly 1 million degrees. This instrument was built upon the heritage of the Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) which monitors the solar corona since 1996.

SWAP will continue the systematic CME (coronal mass ejection) watch program at an improved image cadence (typically 1 image every minute). With this higher cadence, SWAP will monitor events in the low solar corona that might be relevant for space weather. These events include EIT waves (global waves propagating across the solar disc from the CME eruption site), EUV dimming regions (transient coronal holes from where the CME has lifted off) and filament instabilities (a specific type of flickering during the rise of a filament). SWAP will also take advantage of offpointings provided by the agility featured of PROBA2 platform to follows coronal mass ejections.

SWAP was built at the Centre Spatial de Liege and will be operated from the PROBA-2 Science Center at the Royal Observatory of Belgium.

SWAP has been used to study coronal brightspot dynamics.[1]

See also

References

  1. Kalugodu, Chandrashekhar; S Krishna Prasad, ·; Banerjee, Dipankar; Ravindra, B; Seaton, D (2013-01-01). "Dynamics of Coronal Bright Points as Seen by Sun Watcher Using Active Pixel System Detector and Image Processing (SWAP), Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA), and Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) PROBA2 – First Two Years of Solar Observation Guest Editors". Solar Physics. 286: 125–142.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.