Bibcode
Bettonvil, F. C. M.; Collados, M.; Feller, A.; Gelly, B. F.; Keller, C. U.; Kentischer, T. J.; López Ariste, A.; Pleier, O.; Snik, F.; Socas-Navarro, H.
Bibliographical reference
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy III. Edited by McLean, Ian S.; Ramsay, Suzanne K.; Takami, Hideki. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 7735, pp. 77356I-77356I-12 (2010).
Advertised on:
7
2010
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
EST (European Solar Telescope) is a 4-m class solar telescope, which is
currently in the conceptual design phase. EST will be located at the
Canary Islands and aims at observations with the best possible spectral,
spatial and temporal resolution and best polarimetric performance, of
the solar photosphere and chromosphere, using a suite of instruments
that can efficiently produce two-dimensional spectropolarimetric
information of the thermal, dynamic and magnetic properties of the
plasma over many scale heights, and ranging from λ=350 until 2300
nm. In order to be able to fulfill the stringent requirements for
polarimetric sensitivity and accuracy, from the very beginning the
polarimetry has been included in the design work. The overall philosophy
has been to use a combination of techniques, which includes a telescope
with low (and stable) instrumental polarization, optimal full Stokes
polarimeters, differential measurement schemes, fast modulation and
demodulation, and accurate calibration. The current baseline optical
layout consists of a 14-mirror layout, which is polarimetrically
compensated and nonvarying in time. In the polarization free F2 focus
ample space is reserved for calibration and modulators and a
polarimetric switch. At instrument level the s-, and p-planes of
individual components are aligned, resulting in a system in which
eigenvectors can travel undisturbed through the system.