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The effect of newly erupting flux on the polar coronal holes
Authors:N. R. Sheeley Jr.  Y. M. Wang  J. W. Harvey
Affiliation:1. E.O. Hulburt Center for Space Research, Naval Research Laboratory, 20375-5000, Washington, DC, U.S.A.
2. Applied Research Corporation, 20785, Landover, MD, U.S.A.
3. National Solar Observatory, 85726, Tucson, AZ, U.S.A.
Abstract:He i 10830 Å images show that early in sunspot cycles 21 and 22, large bipolar magnetic regions strongly affected the boundaries of the nearby polar coronal holes. East of each eruption, the hole boundary immediately contracted poleward, leaving a band of enhanced helium network. West of the eruption, the boundary remained diffuse and gradually expanded equatorward into the leading, like-polarity part of the bipolar magnetic region. Comparisons between these observations and simulations based on a current-free coronal model suggest that:
  1. The Sun's polar magnetic fields are confined to relatively small caps of high average field strength, apparently by a poleward meridional flow.
  2. The enhanced helium network at high latitude marks the location of relatively strong polar fields that have become linked to the newly erupted bipolar region in that hemisphere.
  3. The distortion of the polar-hole boundary is accompanied by a corresponding distortion of the equatorial neutral sheet in the outer corona, in which the amount of warping depends on the magnitude of the erupted flux relative to the strength of the Sun's polar magnetic fields.
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