Abstract

Abstract The Extreme-ultraviolet Variability Experiment (EVE) onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory detects the solar EUV spectra with high temporal cadence and spectral resolution. The wavelength shifts of emission lines provide key information of the dynamics of the Sun. However, some of EVE spectral observations are influenced by the non-uniformly distributed irradiance on the Sun, which may prevent us from correctly understanding the physical processes happening in the solar corona. Here, based on the only published on-orbit calibration data of EVE He II 30.38 nm line on 2011 January 27, we develop a method to correct the He II 30.38 nm line by using AIA 304 imaging data. This correction method is then applied to EVE He II 30.38 nm data from 2010 October 29 to 2011 March 3 to study the Doppler oscillations of the solar He II 30.38 nm line, in which we show that the half-month periodic Doppler oscillation is caused by non-uniformly distributed irradiance mainly due to the presence of active regions. Other EVE coronal lines also present similar Doppler oscillations, suggesting that an appropriate correction must be implemented before interpreting the oscillation phenomena appearing in these lines.

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