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Joint Diagnostics of Circumsolar Sky Brightness Using Coronagraphic Measurements and Aerosol Optical Inversions at Maunaloa

  • Thomas A. Schad
  • , Paul Bryans
  • , André Fehlmann
  • , Sarah Gibson
  • , David M. Harrington
  • , Lucas A. Tarr
  • , Steven Tomczyk
  • , Jeffrey G. Yepez
  • National Solar Observatory
  • National Center for Atmospheric Research
  • Solar Scientific LLC
  • University of California Observatories

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Atmospheric aerosols strongly influence daytime sky quality for solar coronal imaging, yet few studies directly link aerosol properties and sky brightness measurements within ∼2° of the Sun. Here, we compare externally occulted coronagraphic measurements of near-Sun radiance with aerosol-constrained inferences derived from direct-Sun and sky photometry. Our analysis focuses on Mauna Loa Observatory, a well-characterized high-altitude site for atmospheric and solar observations. We present coronagraphic measurements of near-Sun radiance at 1. °54 ± 0. °77 from the solar disk center acquired between 2006 and 2007 by an ATST sky brightness monitor (SBM). These data are directly compared with circumsolar radiances inferred at 1. °54 using Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) almucantar measurements and aerosol optical retrievals. We find quantitative agreement between these two approaches, enabling extension to multidecadal analyses of circumsolar radiance and its relationship to aerosol properties and related proxies (e.g., the Ångström exponent) using AERONET data from 2000 to 2025. Near-Sun radiances are expressed relative to the solar disk-center radiance, facilitating direct comparison to related studies. Finally, we synthesize physically based true-color images of the circumsolar sky under representative aerosol conditions as an observational aid, in part to illustrate that visually enhanced solar aureoles do not necessarily imply poor infrared coronal observing conditions. This methodology provides an extended framework for assessing daytime coronal sky quality at existing and future observing sites, including DKIST and the proposed Coronal Solar Magnetism Observatory facility.

Original languageEnglish
Article number250
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume1000
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2026
Externally publishedYes

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