
doi: 10.1086/183979
New observations of systematic Doppler shifts of EUV resonance lines formed both in the low corona and transition region are reported. They were made with an improved, high-resolution, stable, rocket-borne spectrometer flown on 1981 November 23. The chord of the solar disk scanned by the spectrometer crossed the north polar cap hole and its low-latitude extension, and also a compact low-latitude hole near sun center. Within both holes, the lines were systematically shifted to shorter wavelengths relative to the rest of the solar disk. These observations strengthen the association of negative Doppler shifts with coronal holes and indicate that this 'blueshift signature', previously observed only within small low-latitude holes, is also characteristic of the low-density polar corona. The mean relative blueshift measured in lambda 625 Mg X (T = 10 to the 6.15 power K) within the polar hole was about 8 km/s.
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