
TL;DR
This study reports the first observation of multi-thermal blobs, likely plasmoids, in recurrent EUV jets, providing insights into magnetic reconnection processes in solar coronal jets.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detection of blobs in coronal jets and links them to plasmoids formed by tearing-mode instability during magnetic reconnection.
Findings
Blobs are multi-thermal with median temperature ~2.3 MK.
Blobs are ~3 Mm in diameter with 24-60 s lifetimes.
Jets recur with intervals of 40-45 min and show cooling after eruptions.
Abstract
In this paper, we report our discovery of blobs in the recurrent and homologous jets that occurred at the western edge of NOAA active region 11259 on 2011 July 22. The jets were observed in the seven extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) filters of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument aboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Using the base-difference images of the six filters (94, 131, 171, 211, 193, and 335 {\AA}), we carried out the differential emission measure (DEM) analyses to explore the thermodynamic evolutions of the jets. The jets were accompanied by cool surges observed in the H line center of the ground-based telescope in the Big Bear Solar Observatory. The jets that had lifetimes of 2030 min recurred at the same place for three times with interval of 4045 min. Interestingly, each of the jets intermittently experienced several upward eruptions at the speed…
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