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The High-Resolution Coronal Imager, Flight 2.1

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arxiv 1909.05942 v1 pith:IISDLFJP submitted 2019-09-12 astro-ph.SR

The High-Resolution Coronal Imager, Flight 2.1

Laurel A. Rachmeler (1) , Amy R. Winebarger (1) , Sabrina L. Savage (1) , Leon Golub (2) , Ken Kobayashi (1) , Genevieve D. Vigil (3) , David H. Brooks (4) , Jonathan W. Cirtain (5)
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Bart De Pontieu (6 7 8) David E. McKenzie (1) Richard J. Morton (9) Hardi Peter (10) Paola Testa (2) Sanjiv K. Tiwari (6 11) Robert W. Walsh (12) Harry P. Warren (13) Caroline Alexander (3) Darren Ansell (12) Brent L. Beabout (1) Dyana L. Beabout (1) Christian W. Bethge (3) Patrick R. Champey (1) Peter N. Cheimets (2) Mark A. Cooper (1) Helen K. Creel (1) Richard Gates (2) Carlos Gomez (1) Anthony Guillory (1) Harlan Haight (1) William D. Hogue (1) Todd Holloway (1) David W. Hyde (1) Richard Kenyon (12) Joseph N. Marshall (1) Jeff E. McCracken (1) Kenneth McCracken (2) Karen O. Mitchell (1) Mark Ordway (2) Tim Owen (1) Jagan Ranganathan (3) Bryan A. Robertson (1) M. Janie Payne (1) William Podgorski (2) Jonathan Pryor (1) Jenna Samra (2) Mark D. Sloan (14) Howard A. Soohoo (1) D. Brandon Steele (1) Furman V. Thompson (1) Gary S. Thornton (1) Benjamin Watkinson1 (2) David Windt (15) ((1) NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (2) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (3) Universities Space Research Association (4) College of Science George Mason University (5) BWX Technologies Inc. (6) Lockheed Martin Solar Astrophysics Laboratory (7) Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics (8) Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics University of Oslo (9) Department of Mathematics Physics Electrical Engineering Northumbria University (10) Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (11) Bay Area Environmental Research Institute (12) University of Central Lancashire (13) Space Science Division Naval Research Laboratory (14) Jacobs (15) Reflective X-ray Optics LLC)
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classification astro-ph.SR
keywords instrumentcoronacoronalflighthi-chigh-resolutionimagerimages
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The third flight of the High-Resolution Coronal Imager (Hi-C 2.1) occurred on May 29, 2018, the Sounding Rocket was launched from White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. The instrument has been modified from its original configuration (Hi-C 1) to observe the solar corona in a passband that peaks near 172 Angstrom and uses a new, custom-built low-noise camera. The instrument targeted Active Region 12712, and captured 78 images at a cadence of 4.4 sec (18:56:22 - 19:01:57 UT; 5 min and 35 sec observing time). The image spatial resolution varies due to quasi-periodic motion blur from the rocket; sharp images contain resolved features of at least 0.47 arcsec. There are coordinated observations from multiple ground- and space-based telescopes providing an unprecedented opportunity to observe the mass and energy coupling between the chromosphere and the corona. Details of the instrument and the data set are presented in this paper.

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