English

Magnetic Evolution and Temperature Variation in a Coronal Hole

Astrophysics 2010-11-11 v1

Abstract

We have explored the magnetic flux evolution and temperature variation in a coronal-hole region, using Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) deep magnetograms and {\it SOHO}/EIT images observed from 2005 October 10 to 14. For comparison, we also investigated a neighboring quiet region of the Sun. The coronal hole evolved from its mature stage to its disappearance during the observing period. We have obtained the following results: (1) When the coronal hole was well developed on October 10, about 60 % of the magnetic flux was positive. The EUV brightness was 420 counts pixel1^{-1}, and the coronal temperature, estimated from the line ratio of the EIT 195 {\AA} and 171 {\AA} images, was 1.07 MK. (2) On October 14, when the coronal hole had almost disappeared, 51 % of the magnetic flux was positive, the EUV radiance was 530 counts pixel1^{-1}, and the temperature was 1.10 MK. (3) In the neighboring quiet region, the fraction of positive flux varied between 0.49 and 0.47. The EUV brightness displayed an irregular variation, with a mean value of 870 counts pixel1^{-1}. The temperature was almost constant at 1.11 MK during the five-day observation. Our results demonstrate that in a coronal hole less imbalance of the magnetic flux in opposite polarities leads to stronger EUV brightness and higher coronal temperatures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0705.0598,
  title  = {Magnetic Evolution and Temperature Variation in a Coronal Hole},
  author = {Jun Zhang and Guiping Zhou and Jingxiu Wang and Haimin Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0705.0598},
  year   = {2010}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T08:24:55.355Z