Chen, Y.; Mandal, S.; Peter, H.; Chitta, L. P.: Bidirectional propagating brightenings in arch filament systems observed by Solar Orbiter/EUI. Astronomy and Astrophysics 692, p. A119 (2024)
Chitta, L. P.; Hannah, I.G.; Fletcher, L.; Hudson, H.S.; Young, P.R.; Krucker, S.; Peter, H.: Hard X-rays from the deep solar atmosphere: An unusual UV burst with flare properties. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS (2024)
Chitta, L. P.; van Noort, M.; Smitha, H. N.; Priest, E.R.; van der Voort, L.H.M.R.: Photospheric Hot Spots at Solar Coronal Loop Footpoints Revealed by Hyperspectral Imaging Observations. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL (1) (2024)
Pontin, D. I.; Priest, E. R.; Chitta, L. P.; Titov, V. S.: Coronal Heating and Solar Wind Generation by Flux Cancellation Reconnection. The Astrophysical Journal 960, p. 51 (2024)
Chitta, L. P.; Zhukov, A. N.; Berghmans, D.; Peter, H.; Parenti, S.; Mandal, S.; Aznar Cuadrado, R.; Schühle, U.; Teriaca, L.; Auchère, F.et al.; Barczynski, K.; Buchlin, É.; Harra, L.; Kraaikamp, E.; Long, D. M.; Rodriguez, L.; Schwanitz, C.; Smith, P. J.; Verbeeck, C.; Seaton, D. B.: Picoflare jets power the solar wind emerging from a coronal hole on the Sun. Science 38, pp. 867 - 872 (2023)
Li, Z.; Cheng, X.; Ding, M. D.; Chitta, L. P.; Peter, H.; Berghmans, D.; Smith, P. J.; Auchère, F.; Parenti, S.; Barczynski, K.et al.; Harra, L.; Schühle, U.; Buchlin, É.; Verbeeck, C.; Aznar Cuadrado, R.; Zhukov, A. N.; Long, D. M.; Teriaca, L.; Rodriguez, L.: Evidence of external reconnection between an erupting mini-filament and ambient loops observed by Solar Orbiter/EUI. Astronomy and Astrophysics 673, p. A83 (2023)
Chitta, L. P.; Seaton, D. B.; Downs, C.; DeForest, C. E.; Higginson, A. K.: Direct observations of a complex coronal web driving highly structured slow solar wind. Nature Astronomy (2022)
Various application review phases in 2025. PhD projects in cosmochemistry, planetary science, solar and stellar physics, helioseismology, asteroseismology, ...
The space probe’s optical bench is now connected to the service module. Starting in 2027, the European mission will search for Earth-like worlds outside our Solar System.
The Planetary Plasma Environments group (PPE) has a strong heritage in the exploration of planetary magnetospheres and space plasma interactions throughout the solar system. It has contributed instruments to several past missions that flew-by or orbited Jupiter (Galileo, Cassini, Ulysses). The PPE participates in the JUICE mission by contributing hardware and scientific expertise to the Particle Environment Package (PEP).