Abstract

Daily images of the white light corona between 3 and 10 R⊗ have been recorded by a coronagraph aboard the OSO-7 unmanned satellite since October 3, 1971. Images for the years 1972 and 1973 have been examined for persistent coronal forms. For most of 1972 there passed over the Sun's east limb a regular alternation of northern and southern streamers separated frequently by equatorial fans. The alternation suggested the rotation of a stable four-sectored coronal structure produced by two northern streamers, 180° apart in longitude and a similar pair of southern streamers shifted 90° in longitude. Toward the end of 1972 this structure evolved into a two-sectored structure produced by a single northern streamer and a single southern streamer separated by 180° in longitude. This structure remained stable during most of 1973. Transition from a northern to southern streamer, converted to Earth passage dates, correlated with the passage of a -/+ sector boundary in the interplanetary magnetic field. Conversely, the transition from a southern to northern streamer was associated with a +/-boundary passage. These correlations support the recent observations of Hansen et al. (1973).

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