We present joint observations of the Sun by the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Interface Region Imaging
Spectrograph (IRIS). The observations were made of a solar active region on
2015 December 18 as part of the ALMA science verification effort. A map of the
Sun's continuum emission of size 2.4′×2.3′ was obtained by ALMA at a
wavelength of 1.25 mm (239 GHz) using mosaicing techniques. A contemporaneous
map of size 1.9′×2.9′ was obtained in the Mg II h doublet line at
2803.5\AA\ by IRIS. Both mm/submm−λ continuum emission and ultraviolet
(UV) line emission are believed to originate from the solar chromosphere and
both have the potential to serve as powerful and complementary diagnostics of
physical conditions in this poorly understood layer of the solar atmosphere.
While a clear correlation between mm-λ brightness temperature TB and
the Mg II h line radiation temperature Trad is observed the slope is <1,
perhaps as a result of the fact that these diagnostics are sensitive to
different parts of the chromosphere and/or the Mg II h line source function
includes a scattering component. There is a significant offset between the mean
TB(1.25 mm) and mean Trad(Mg II), the former being ≈35%
greater than the latter. Partitioning the maps into "sunspot", "quiet regions",
and "plage regions" we find that the slope of the scatter plots between the
IRIS Mg II h line Trad and the ALMA brightness temperature TB is 0.4
(sunspot), 0.56 (quiet regions), and 0.66 (plage regions). We suggest that this
change may be caused by the regional dependence of the formation heights of the
IRIS and ALMA diagnostics, and/or the increased degree of coupling between the
UV source function and the local gas temperature in the hotter, denser gas in
plage regions.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure