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Studying the properties of the solar convection using high-resolution spectropolarimetry began in the early 90s with the focus on observations in the visible wavelength regions. Its extension to the infrared (IR) remains largely unexplored. The IR iron lines around 15600,$rm{AA}$, most commonly known for their high magnetic sensitivity, also have a non-zero response to line-of-sight velocity below $log (tau)=0.0$. In this paper we aim to tap this potential to explore the possibility of using them to measure sub-surface convective velocities. By assuming a snapshot of a three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulation to represent the quiet Sun, we investigate how well the iron IR lines can reproduce the LOS velocity in the cube and up to what depth. We use the recently developed spectropolarimetric inversion code SNAPI and discuss the optimal node placements for the retrieval of reliable results from these spectral lines. We find that the IR iron lines can measure the convective velocities down to $log (tau)=0.5$, below the photosphere, not only at original resolution of the cube but also when degraded with a reasonable spectral and spatial PSF and stray light. Meanwhile, the commonly used Fe~{sc i} 6300,AA{} line pair performs significantly worse. Our investigation reveals that the IR iron lines can probe the subsurface convection in the solar photosphere. This paper is a first step towards exploiting this diagnostic potential.
We review the coronal visible and infrared lines, collecting previous observations, and comparing, whenever available, observed radiances with those predicted by various models: the quiet Sun, a moderately active Sun, and an active region as observed
Observations of the Sun in the visible spectral range belong to standard measurements obtained by instruments both on the ground and in the space. Nowadays, both nearly continuous full-disc observations with medium resolution and dedicated campaigns
The pattern of migrating zonal flow bands associated with the solar cycle, known as the torsional oscillation, has been monitored with continuous global helioseismic observations by the Global Oscillations Network Group, together with those made by t
Are critical points important in the Solar Probe Mission? This is a brief discussion of the nature of critical points in solar wind models, what this means physically in the real solar wind, and what can be expected along a nominal Solar Probe Orbit.
The abundance of iron is measured from emission line complexes at 6.65 keV (Fe line) and 8 keV (Fe/Ni line) in {em RHESSI} X-ray spectra during solar flares. Spectra during long-duration flares with steady declines were selected, with an isothermal a