The SOHO Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Telescope
brought to you by
The EIT Consortium
End of SOHO EIT CME watch observations
At the end of 2010 July, SOHO's Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) completed fourteen and a half years of synoptic observations of the low corona. SDO AIA images at much higher resolution and time cadence are now available for all the EIT wavebands, and three other EUV wavelengths as well. The telemetry bandwidth that has been used by EIT will be used by LASCO to improve the cadence of its observations of the fastest CME's. EIT will continue to obtain a couple of "synoptic sets" of images in all four wavelengths per day to track detector behavior, and to maintain the uniform data set. This, and other changes in SOHO instrument operations, are part of the transition to the "Bogart" phase of the SOHO mission — designed to get the maximum science out of the mission at the minimum cost to NASA's shrinking Heliophysics Mission Operations and Data Analysis (MO&DA) budget. EIT data will continue to be available via the Virtual Solar Observatory and via the older EIT Web catalog interface.|Skip navigation bar
| New EIT synoptic charts
| An EIT campaign of high cadence observations in shutterless readout mode
| EIT observations in support of the total solar eclipses
| Web access to EIT images and FITS files
| EIT calibration rocket | EIT 195 Å movies of a disk CME | EIT 195 Å/171 Å temperature diagnostic maps | EIT Observing Targets | EIT Science Topics | Current Solar Images | EIT Observing Programs | What EIT is Designed to Do | The Instrument | Response: Updated Daily | Response: EIT CCD bakeout history | EIT detector response to SEP events | Engineering: EIT Temperature Plots | Engineering: LASCO OBE software load history | Data Rights Policy | Science Planning Schedule | EIT User's Handbook | Operations Team | SDAC Home | SOHO Home |
EIT User's Handbook , EIT Calibration, EIT software updates
occur on December 10, 2001.
Accessing EIT data
If you want GIF images of EIT data....
You can find bothIf you want EIT data for quantitative research....
The following procedure should be followed to obtain the EIT data in FITS format:- Determine which EIT data are available to support your study. An EIT team member can provide assistance throughout the whole process of obtaining data. To generate a list of available data, access the EIT WWW catalog interface or the Virtual Solar Observatory. The web catalog interface will provide a list and brief description of the data obtained over a range of dates. Keep in mind that the synoptic data and full-field images can also complement a study, so your data request needn't be restricted to a specific field of view or time cadence.
- Note that using the Web interface, you can now download compressed tar files of the EIT FITS files
EIT shutterless
program
The EIT group in the solar Physics Group at the
Royal Observatory of Belgium is
conducting a synoptic observing
campaign using the high-cadence capability of the EIT instrument when run in
shutterless readout mode. The latest running of the shutterless program
results are available here. EIT Shutterless campaign, [Run #38] 2010 January 7 Seg 1 Preliminary Results
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2010 January 7th 19:00 - 22:00 UT |
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EIT Shutterless campaign, [Run #38] 2010 January 14 Seg 2 Preliminary Results
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2010 January 14th 19:00 - 22:30 UT |
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For Archived Shutterless information, data, and movies; see The ROB High Cadence Pages
EIT and Eclipses
- LASCO and EIT observing plan for 2001 June 21, including brief descriptions of the support requested by various eclipse expeditions
- The EIT Eclipse 2001 page, with images and useful links, will contain images from the days around (and of) the eclipse.
- The EIT Eclipse '99 page, with images and useful links, is now online.
- The EIT Eclipse '98 page, with images and useful links, is now online.
EIT Calibration Rocket results
| The NRL/CSL/IAS EIT rocket flight to help calibrate the SOHO EIT was launched and recovered successfully on Thursday, 1997 October 16. Preliminary results indicate that, aside from a small light leak in the Fe XV 284 Å channel, the flight was fully successful. Exposure times and detector performance appear to have been nominal. |
Click on the thumbnail image on the left to access the NRL EIT calroc page.
EIT Fe XII Å observations of disk coronal mass ejection and Moreton wave, 1999 July 19
Movies of a flare-related wave and dimming indicative of a possible earthward-directed coronal mass ejection (CME).GIF movie | Difference GIF movie | |
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| 1999 July 19 00:00 - 03:36 UT |
EIT Fe XII Å observations of Solar Tornado, 1998 April 20
Movies of a helical field structure untwisting during a coronal mass ejection (CME).MPEG Movie | QuickTime Movie | Time |
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1998 April 20 08:11 - 11:02 UT |
Maps of the temperature-sensitive ratio (Fe XII 195 Å/ Fe IX, X 171 Å)
The ratio is sensitive over the range 0.9 MK < Te < 1.5 MK.Older EIT movies
OBE history
EIT synoptic maps
Additional EIT synoptic charts may be found at the NRL EIT/LASCO synoptic maps site
EIT observing plan for tomorrow
EIT science topics
Current solar images from EIT
Full resolution GIF representations of EIT images can be found here.
The LASCO/EIT observing program
The two-month-long EIT and LASCO interim synoptic program, which began 1996 May 14, ended July 16 with the modification of the on-board software. The interim synoptic schedule decribes the former LASCO C1, C2, C3 and EIT "time slots" in the daily plan. The current observing schedule is much more flexible and varied, and can be obtained by checking either the SOHO daily targets page or the SOHO Daily Operations Database.What EIT is designed to do
The SOHO EIT is able to image the solar transition region and inner corona in four, selected bandpasses in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV):- Fe IX/X, 171 Å
- Fe XII, 195 Å
- Fe XV, 284 Å
- He II, 304 Å
The instrument
The EIT First Results paper
(Moses et al. 1997, Solar Physics 175, 571) is available at EIT First ResultsThe Preflight Photometric Calibration of EIT
(Dere et al. 2000, Solar Physics 195, 13) is available at EIT CalibrationResponse: updated daily
The mean counts per unit time in full-field EIT images in each of the four sectors are plotted from the beginning of operations. Note that 304 Å appears to show the greatest change with time, and with bakeout. A table listing the times of our CCD bakeouts is given in: EIT CCD bakeout historySector | Plots | ||
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Fe IX/X 171 Å | Linear | Log-linear | Recent Linear |
Fe XII 195 Å | Linear | Log-linear | Recent Linear |
Fe XV 284 Å | Linear | Log-linear | Recent Linear |
He II 304 Å | Linear | Log-linear | Recent Linear |
The proton storm of 1997 November 6 - 10
Statistics on the EIT detector's response to the energetic proton event following the X9 flare of 1997 November 6 are available.Engineering: EIT temperature plots
The most recent plots of:Data rights policy
The EIT Consortium has released its data rights policy to clarify when and how access to EIT data will be available to non-Consortium members. At the 1996 March meeting of the EIT Consortium, the Consortium members agreed on a data rights policy to encourage the "widest possible access to and analysis of the EIT data consonant with the rights of the team members whose dedication and expertise made the instrument a reality."EIT science planning schedule
EIT science planners serve for four weeks (plus a few days). We have a tentative schedule for the next several months.The EIT Operations Team at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- Joe Gurman, NASA/GSFC, Co-I
- Amanda Shields, ADNET, Ground Systems Manager
- Kevin Schenk, ADNET, Lead Command Generator/Programmer
Joe Gurman
- Kevin Schenk
Web curator: Joseph B. Gurman
Responsible NASA official: Joseph B. Gurman, Facility Scientist, Solar Data Analysis Center
+1 301 286-4767
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Solar Physics Branch / Code 682
Greenbelt, MD 20771
Last revised - J.B. Gurman
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