Bibcode
                                    
                            H. Peter,; E. Alsina Ballester ; V. Andretta,; F. Auchère,; L. Belluzzi,; A. Bemporad,; D. Berghmans,; E. Buchlin,; A. Calcines,; L.P. Chitta,; K. Dalmasse,; T. del Pino Alemán ; A. Feller,; C. Froment,; R. Harrison,; M. Janvier,; S. Matthews,; S. Parenti,; D. Przybylski,; S.K. Solanki,; J. Štěpán,; L. Teriaca; J. Trujillo Bueno
    Bibliographical reference
                                    Experimental Astronomy
Advertised on:
    
                        12
            
                        2022
            
  Journal
                                    
                            Citations
                                    2
                            Refereed citations
                                    2
                            Description
                                    The magnetic activity of the Sun directly impacts the Earth and human life. Likewise, other stars will have an impact on the habitability of 
planets orbiting these host stars. The lack of information on the magnetic field in the higher atmospheric layers hampers our progress in 
understanding solar magnetic activity. Overcoming this limitation would allow us to address four paramount long-standing questions: 
(1) How does the magnetic field couple the different layers of the atmosphere, and how does it transport energy? (2) How does the magnetic 
field structure, drive and interact with the plasma in the chromosphere and upper atmosphere? (3) How does the magnetic field destabilise
 the outer solar atmosphere and thus affect the interplanetary environment? (4) How do magnetic processes accelerate particles to high 
energies? New ground-breaking observations are needed to address these science questions. We suggest a suite of three instruments 
that far exceed current capabilities in terms of spatial resolution, light-gathering power, and polarimetric performance: (a) A large-aperture 
UV-to-IR telescope of the 1-3 m class aimed mainly to measure the magnetic field in the chromosphere by combining high spatial resolution 
and high sensitivity. (b) An extreme-UV-to-IR coronagraph that is designed to measure the large-scale magnetic field in the corona with an 
aperture of about 40 cm. (c) An extreme-UV imaging polarimeter based on a 30 cm telescope that combines high throughput in the extreme 
UV with polarimetry to connect the magnetic measurements of the other two instruments. This mission to measure the magnetic field will 
unlock the driver of the dynamics in the outer solar atmosphere and thereby greatly advance our understanding of the Sun and the heliosphere.
                            Related projects
                 
Magnetism, Polarization and Radiative Transfer in Astrophysics
            
    Magnetic fields pervade all astrophysical plasmas and govern most of the variability in the Universe at intermediate time scales. They are present in stars across the whole Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, in galaxies, and even perhaps in the intergalactic medium. Polarized light provides the most reliable source of information at our disposal for the
            
            Ernest
            
                        Alsina Ballester