Abstract:
Recurrent chromospheric fan-shaped jets highlight the highly dynamic nature of the solar atmosphere. They have been named as “light walls” or “peacock jets” in high-resolution observations. In this study, we examined the underlying mechanisms responsible for the generation of recurrent chromospheric fan-shaped jets utilizing data from the Goode Solar Telescope at Big Bear Solar Observatory, along with data from the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) and the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory. These jets appear as dark elongated structures in Hα wing images, persist for over an hour, and are located in the intergranular lanes between a pair of same-polarity sunspots. Our analysis reveals that magnetic @ux cancellation at the jet base plays a crucial role in their formation. HMI line-of-sight magnetograms show a gradual decrease in opposite-polarity @uxes spanning the sequence of jets in Hα−0.8 Å images, suggesting that recurrent magnetic reconnection, likely driven by recurrent miniature @ux-rope eruptions that are built up and triggered by @ux cancellation, powers these jets. Additionally, magnetic Beld extrapolations reveal a 3D magnetic null-point topology at the jet formation site ∼1.25 Mm height. Furthermore, we observed strong brightening in the AIA 304 Å channel above the neutral line. Based on our observations and extrapolation results, we propose that these recurrent chromospheric fan-shaped jets align with the miniBlament eruption model previously proposed for coronal jets. Though our study focuses on fan-shaped jets in between same-polarity sunspots, a similar mechanism might be responsible for light-bridge-associated fan-shaped jets.