Abstract
Although it is not widely known outside the discipline of solar
radiophysics, a long-standing
puzzle exists: the poles of the Sun appear brighter than the rest of the
quiet Sun in a restricted
range of wavelengths roughly from 15 GHz to about 48 GHz (cf. Kosugi et
al. 1986). At somewhat
lower radio frequencies the poles appear darker than the quiet Sun due
to a deficit of coronal
material, while at mm-wavelengths the polar and non-polar quiet Sun
appear quite uniform due to
the similarity of the atmospheric structure at lower heights in the
chromosphere. The excess
brightness at the poles has also been reported in coronal holes on the
disk, and so is apparently
related to the phenomenon of coronal holes. The brightening likely
corresponds to an elevated
temperature in the upper chromosphere in coronal holes relative to
normal quiet Sun. The
phenomenon is especially well suited to study via radio emission due to
the unique sensitivity of
radio waves to this height range in the chromosphere. The possibility
exists that the different
chromospheric structure for coronal holes implied by the radio
brightening may offer some clue to
the origin of the fast solar wind, which is now well established to
arise in coronal holes.
Radio brightening of coronal holes is a difficult observational problem
because an instrument is
needed that can image large areas of the Sun at relatively high
resolution. The Nobeyama
Radioheliograph has the required capability and operates at 17 and 34
GHz, nicely within the
frequency range where the brightening occurs. We compare
Nobeyama radio
synthesis images on
several days in 1996 with images from the EIT, CDS, and MDI experiments
on the Solar and
Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft, and with high resolution
images from the Big Bear
Solar Observatory, with the aim of determining the spatial and temporal
characteristics of the
brightening. We compare the extent of the radio brightening with the
boundaries of the coronal
holes seen from the SOHO data, to establish the previously suggested
identity of the polar
brightening with coronal holes. We investigate whether the brightening
is primarily associated
with network features, faculae, or perhaps bipolar magnetic elements, or
whether it is instead a
diffuse brightening more-or-less uniformly covering the coronal hole
area. We look for temporal
variations, and their correlation with changing features seen from SOHO.
We conclude with some
ideas for how the chromospheric structure may be different in coronal
holes than in normal quiet
Sun, and speculate on the implications for acceleration of the fast
solar wind.