WIP/DRAFT

The first light of my spectroheliograph was in the summer of 2024. It was a stock Sol’Ex, with a modified setup, using full aperture bandpass filters as an energy rejection method, instead of the recommended full spectrum ND filter or Herschel prism, flooding the instrument with the right kind of wavelength, while also managing the thermal load and keeping the zero order and any internal spectral fog at bay. I quickly left the comfort of the Fraunhofer lines, and stumbled into prominences in „unknown” wavelengths[1], a frustrating experience that lead me towards literature, and also propelled me to create the atlas of spectroheliograms[2].

In the meanwhile, almost as a side project, dedicating telescope time to this in an on and off manner, I started to hunt down prominences in various spectral regions and lines, some known and expected, some not so much. Thus today I know that the ultraviolet „unknown” wavelengths showing prominences were most likely the magnesium triplet around 383nm, that Paschen hydrogens are dwarfed by not just Balmer hydrogens but also by the helium at 1083nm, which shows coronal holes, just like the yellow and the deep red helium do. I’ve seen the hydrogen ladder almost up till the Balmer break, and seen that neutral calcium is something worthy to at least check for prominences, that the infrared oxygen triplet can do very funny stuff, with obvious prominences, and that ionized metals show dark plages and often times prominences that are easier to see than some helium lines.

 

Wavelength [Å] id prominences filaments plages flares corona notes, comments
3706 Ti II n/o n/o darker n/o link
darkened plages, a typical image of ionized metals
3797.9 H I harder very weak,
some are visible
if extracted
against a continuum
some mottling, when extracted n/po link

H 10 (theta)

very anemic, even compared to H 9

3829.37 Mg I weaker in the triplet, but there n/o bright n/o link
 3832.31 Mg I medium n/o bright n/o link

extracting against a continuum can easily reveal the prominences

3835.4 H I medium n/o darken the continuum’s
bright plages,
mottled like delta, when extracted
bright H 9 (eta)

link

even more anemic than the lower H lines

3838 Mg I medium hard but there bright bright, flaring prom part of a triplet

link

fainter prom than the H 9, but still obvious

far enough from H 9 (eta) to not blend

3888.65 He I n/o n/o n/o in the Sol’Ex, more or less blends with the H 8 line
 3889 H I medium hard but probably there darken the continuum’s
bright plages,
mottled like delta, when extracted
bright H 8 (dzeta)

when extracted against a continuum, looks like epsilon, which in turn looks like an anemic delta

link

3914 Ti II n/o n/o darker n/o link
darkened plages, a typical image of ionized metals
3933.7 Ca II trivial easy very bright bright the Ca II K line
3968.5 Ca II trivial
much brighter than Hε
easy very bright bright the Ca II H line
3970 H I medium,
dwarfed by Ca II H
sometimes darken the continuum’s
bright plages,mottled like delta, when extracted
bright Hydrogen epsilon

link

extracting against a continuum can easily reveal a disk
that looks like an anemic version
of hydrogen delta

link

Wavelength [Å] id prominences filaments plages flares corona notes, comments
4077.7 Sr II medium n/o somewhat darker n/o link

extracting against a continuum can easily reveal the prominences

4102 H I less easily sometimes as darker mottled areas n/o Hydrogen delta.

The last hydrogen in the Balmer series visible without extracting against a continuum. When epsilon is extracted, looks like an anemic delta

4215.5 Sr II medium n/o somewhat darker n/o link

just like for 4308, an automated script can reveal prominences that are bright and dense enough

4227 Ca I medium n/o bright n/o link

just like for 4308, an automated script can reveal prominences that are bright and dense enough

4247 Sc II n/o n/o darker n/o link
darkened plages, a typical image of ionized metals
Wavelength [Å] id prominences filaments plages flares corona notes, comments
4300 Ti II easy to hard n/o n/o as below
4302 Ti II medium to hard n/o n/o as below
4307.9 Fe I,

Ca I,

Ti II

easy, mostly medium, sometimes hard n/o brighter bright the darkest line of the Fraunhofer G-band,

iron, calcium and titanium blend together at the sol’ex’s resolution. Scripted extraction makes it a routine to reveal prominences at this wavelength

link

4313 Ti II easy to hard n/o somewhat darker as above/below
4314 Fe II, Sc II easy to hard n/o as above/below
4315 Ti II easy to hard n/o n/o Fraunhofer G-band link

bright prominences, without flaring, can show up right in the reconstruction

Wavelength [Å] id prominences filaments plages flares corona notes, comments
4340 H I medium-easy dark dense ones are obvious present as dark mottled areas bright Hydrogen gamma
4471.5 He I medium-easy medium-hard somewhat darker n/o light blanket
above active regions
at/beyond the limb
for a novice, hard to even locate the wavelength

link

link

4549 Ti II, Fe II n/o n/o darker n/o link
4554 Ba II n/o n/o darker, fainter signal n/o link
4861 H I easily, but fainter than Hα easy some are bright, most are dark-mottled bright Hydrogen beta

link

5015.7 He I very hard n/o somewhat darker a bright one observed (?)light blanket
above active regions
at/beyond the limb
hard to even locate without other lines used as a reference, or having a flare in it

link

link

5018.45 Fe II medium-hard n/o dark bright for a novice, an unassuming dark line in the spectrum, but the solar disk reconstructed from this line can be outright shocking

link

link

link

5167 Mg I hard n/o brighter n/o for a novice, hard to even locate the wavelength
5169 Fe II medium n/o dark n/o while might blend with
the nearby Fe I line,
the plages are obviously
darker than the quiet disk and
the prominences, if flaring, can get brighter than those in Mg
5173 Mg I medium-hard some are obvious brighter bright Mg I b2, of the triplet
5184 Mg I medium-hard some are obvious brighter bright Mg I b1, of the triplet
Wavelength [Å] id prominences filaments plages flares corona notes, comments
5876 He I easily some obvious
on the raw disk reconstructions
dark both dark and bright obvious coronal holes,
when extracted against
a nearby continuumlight blanket
above active regions
at/beyond the limb
He I D3, link

Due to CMOS loosing sensitivity
at 1083nm range, it is reasonable
to observe this line instead

Easy to locate due to the
nearby Na I D doublet and
the obvious bump, ie
the chromosphere
at the disk/spectrum edge

5890 Na I medium-hard some are obvious brighter bright Na I D2
5896 Na I medium-hard some are obvious brighter bright Na I D1
6141.7 Ba II n/o n/o dark n/o a typical ionized metal disk with darkened/dark plages

link

6563 H I trivial trivial bright bright Hydrogen alpha
6678 He I hard nothing obvious
on the disk
nothing obvious
on the disk
n/o some light blanket
above active regions
at/beyond the limb
for a novice, hard to even locate the wavelength
link
7065 He I easily harder darker n/o coronal holes revealed when
extracted against a
nearby continuumlight blanket
above active regions
at/beyond the limb
a weaker twin of the He I D3

link link

7772 O I easily,
some with Doppler
maybe? somewhat darker darkening flares observed,
some with obviously
red shifted absorption
light blanket visible
above active regions
at/beyond the limb(?)dark smudges(?) on the disk,
(?)maybe related to hot spots in the corona(?)
the stronger one of the oxygen triplet

when extracted, shows a mottling
resembling that of an anemic
hydrogen delta/epsilon,
but see the ?smudges? among other funny details

link
link

8542 Ca II trivial obvious much brighter bright one of the Ca II triplet in the infrared

looks like an anemic version of the Ca II K/H, these line are somewhat like Hβ is to Hα

8806 Mg I n/o n/o brighter n/o A few sessions
dedicated to this line
revealed no prominences,
albeit according to gong, there were no bright ones at the time
10830 He I obvious obvious darker dark ones observed a direct line reconstruction yields
obvious coronal holes,
light blanket visible
above active regions
at/beyond the limb
historically „the” helium line,
requires special instrumentlink
10940 H I dwarfed by
the nearby helium
n/o somewhat darker n/o Paschen gamma,
requires special instrumentWhen extracted against a nearby continuum,
the result is similar to an anemic H delta or
an extracted epsilonlink

From the above table:

  • n/o not observed, not occurred, none while observing (according to helioviewer) etc.
  • light blanket: much like in SDO AIA, at and beyond the limb, above active regions, excess light is observed, especially after extracting against a continuum
  • extraction against a continuum: subtraction, division, log/log etc.

[1] shortly after my first light, I observed this prominence that I couldn’t solve at the time //csillagtura.ro/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/d9390877-576c-43bf-98bb-c01ff3271a18.jpg

It was maybe the flaring prominence at 8 o’clock on the disk, on UTC 2024-07-12 10:12 … I might have the raw data somewhere.

[2] https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2515-5172/adef50 and //csillagtura.ro/atlas

 

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