12 November 2019 Multislit spectro-polarimeter: a facility instrument for the Multiapplication Solar Telescope
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Abstract

The multislit spectro-polarimeter (MSSP) is a grating-based littrow spectrograph with five slits at the entrance aperture. The polarimeter consists of a nematic liquid crystal variable retarder as the modulator and a Savart plate as an analyzer. It is one of the facility instruments on the Multiapplication Solar Telescope at the Udaipur Solar Observatory, developed to measure the magnetic fields of the Sun in the photosphere and chromosphere. MSSP currently operates only at 630.2 nm (FeI), but will be upgraded to cover CaII at 854.2 nm, HeI at 1083.2 nm, and FeI at 1565.3 nm. The spectrograph has a spectral dispersion of 15.8  mÅ  ±  1.2  mÅ at 630.2 nm. The polarimeter has a sensitivity of the order of 10  −  2 and the root mean squared noise in the Stokes spectrum (continuum wavelength points of Stokes Q, U, and V) is 0.015I. To obtain an estimate of the instrument induced polarization, an analytical model is developed to determine the polarization introduced by the telescope. A polarimetric calibration (PolCal) unit is used to calibrate the downstream optical path from the telescope exit pupil up to the detector in MSSP. A residual polarization cross talk of 10% is measured in the data after applying PolCal corrections. The polarimetric data obtained from the engineering run (first-light) are inverted using NICOLE, to extract the magnetic field parameters. The field strength derived from MSSP observations is compared with the data obtained from helioseismic and magnetic imager and is found to lie within ±70  G in the umbral region and ±200  G in the penumbral region.

© 2019 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) 2329-4124/2019/$28.00 © 2019 SPIE
Mohanakrishna Ranganathan, Raja Bayanna, Sankarasubramanian Kasiviswanathan, and Shibu Mathew "Multislit spectro-polarimeter: a facility instrument for the Multiapplication Solar Telescope," Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems 5(4), 048001 (12 November 2019). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JATIS.5.4.048001
Received: 8 May 2019; Accepted: 24 October 2019; Published: 12 November 2019
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Telescopes

Polarimetry

Spectrographs

Polarization

Solar telescopes

Data acquisition

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