Small-scale Bright Blobs Ejected from a Sunspot Light Bridge

Abstract

Light bridges (LBs) are bright lanes that divide an umbra into multiple parts in some sunspots. Persistent oscillatory bright fronts at a temperature of 105 K are commonly observed above LBs in the 1400/1330 ~passbands of the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). Based on IRIS observations, we report small-scale bright blobs from the oscillating bright front above a light bridge. Some of these blobs reveal a clear acceleration, whereas the others do not. The average speed of these blobs projected onto the plane of sky is 71.714.7 km s-1, with an initial acceleration of 1.91.3 km s-2. These blobs normally reach a projected distance of 3--7 Mm from their origin sites. From the transition region images we find an average projected area of 0.570.37 Mm2 for the blobs. The blobs were also detected in multi-passbands of the Solar Dynamics Observatory, but not in the Hα images. These blobs are likely to be plasma ejections, and we investigate their kinematics and energetics. Through emission measure analyses, the typical temperature and electron density of these blobs are found to be around 105.47 K and 109.7 cm-3, respectively. The estimated kinetic and thermal energies are on the order of 1022.8 erg and 1023.3 erg, respectively. These small-scale blobs appear to show three different types of formation process. They are possibly triggered by induced reconnection or release of enhanced magnetic tension due to interaction of adjacent shocks, local magnetic reconnection between emerging magnetic bipoles on the light bridge and surrounding unipolar umbral fields, and plasma acceleration or instability caused by upward shocks, respectively.

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