<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<VOEvent role="prediction"
	ivorn="ivo://sot.lmsal.com/VOEvent#2018-06-09T08:14:00Z"
	version="1.11"
	xmlns="http://www.ivoa.net/xml/VOEvent/v1.11"
	xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
	xmlns:lmsal="http://sot.lmsal.com/lmsal"
	xmlns:crd="urn:nvo-coords"
	xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.ivoa.net/xml/VOEvent/VOEvent-v1.1.xsd">


	<Who>
		<!-- Data pertaining to curation: observer, telescope, instrument, planner, tohbans, ... -->
		<Date>2018-06-07T14:13:18.000Z</Date>    <!-- Time VOEvent was generated. -->
		<PublisherID>http://sot.lmsal.com</PublisherID>

		<Contact>
			<Name>Ted Tarbell</Name>
			<Institution>LMSAL</Institution>
			<Communication>
				<Uri>http://lmsal.com</Uri>
				<AddressLine>3251 Hanover Rd, O/ADBS, B/252, Palo Alto, CA, 94304</AddressLine>
				<Telephone>+1-650-424-2400</Telephone>
				<Email>tarbell@lmsal.com</Email>
			</Communication>		</Contact>

		<lmsal:Telescope>Hinode</lmsal:Telescope>
		<lmsal:Instrument>SOTSP</lmsal:Instrument>
		<lmsal:Tohbans>Hosoi</lmsal:Tohbans>
		<lmsal:ChiefPlanner>Shimojo</lmsal:ChiefPlanner>
		<lmsal:ChiefObserver>DeRosa (RCO) -> Oba</lmsal:ChiefObserver>
	</Who>


	<What>
		<!-- Data pertaining to what was observed, measured, ...   Some of these tags might move into Who section. -->
		<lmsal:obsId></lmsal:obsId>
		<lmsal:OBS_NUM>81</lmsal:OBS_NUM>
		<lmsal:JOP_ID>81</lmsal:JOP_ID>
		<lmsal:JOP></lmsal:JOP>
		<lmsal:JOIN_SB>null</lmsal:JOIN_SB>    <!-- S=SOT, X=XRT, E=EIS, SX=SOT+XRT, EX=EIS+XRT -->
		<lmsal:OBSTITLE>HOP358</lmsal:OBSTITLE>
		<lmsal:SCI_OBJ>SPI</lmsal:SCI_OBJ>     <!--  Scientific objectives -->
		<lmsal:SCI_OBS>SPI</lmsal:SCI_OBS>     <!-- Objects being observed -->
		<lmsal:NOAA_NUM></lmsal:NOAA_NUM>
		<lmsal:TARGET>Spicule and Jets</lmsal:TARGET>
		<lmsal:slotNumber>5</lmsal:slotNumber>
	</What>


	<WhereWhen>
		<!-- Space and Time Coordinates. -->
		<ObservatoryLocation ID="Hinode" />

		<ObservationLocation>
			<lmsal:xCen>-18</lmsal:xCen>		<!-- xcen and ycen from FITS -->
			<lmsal:yCen>-56</lmsal:yCen>
			<lmsal:xFov>0</lmsal:xFov>
			<lmsal:yFov>0</lmsal:yFov>
			<crd:AstroCoords coord_system_id="UTC-HGS-TOPO">
				<crd:Time>
					<crd:TimeInterval>2018-06-09T08:14:00.000Z 2018-06-09T08:44:00.000Z</crd:TimeInterval>
				</crd:Time>
				<crd:Position3D>-18 -56</crd:Position3D>
			</crd:AstroCoords>
		</ObservationLocation>

	</WhereWhen>


	<Why>
		<!-- Why was observation performed.  Initial scientific assessment, hypothesized mechanisms, classifications, ... -->
		<Concept>
			<lmsal:Goal>Magnetism in Spicules</lmsal:Goal>
			<lmsal:Purpose>Full Res 50&quot;x81&quot; scan 1-sided</lmsal:Purpose>
		</Concept>

		<Description>
			Spicules may play an important role in the heating of the corona and in powering the solar wind (De Pontieu et al. 2007, 2017). Currently, the dynamics of these structures is well-known (e.g., Rouppe van der Voort et al. 2009, Pereira et al. 2012), and the MHD simulations have shown substantial advances in understanding their origin (e.g., Martinez-Sykora et al. 2017). However, the magnetic structure inside spicules is still poorly understood (e.g., Trujillo Bueno et al. 2005, Orozco Suarez et al. 2015). Due to projection effects, the counterpart of spicules on-disk is still under debate (Rouppe van der Voort et al., 2015). The lack of information of the magnetism inspicules is mainly because the high observational requirements needed to study these phenomena. The fast new cameras installed in the 1.5 m GREGOR telescope (GRIS+) overcome these difficulties, opening a new generation of studies of the magnetic structure of solar spicules. GRIS+ will for the first time allow for diffraction limited spectro-polarimetric observations in the He 10830 line with unprecedented signal-to-noise ratio and therefore complement the IRIS and Hinode spicule observations ideally.
		</Description>
	</Why>

</VOEvent>
