Note the magnetic alignment of the sunspot -- visible as lighter streams pointing out from the black dot -- is angled down and to the right. This is an example of a small ball-of-light being ejected off of a sunspot where the pole of ejection is angle up. This causes the ejected ball-of-light to shoot out of the sun's surface and explode above the surface. Note the first arrow -- pointing up and to the right -- that points to the ball-of-light that has been ejected in the left magnetic lobe of the sunspot. It is visible for two frames. Note the explosion -- above the sun's surface -- indicated by the downward pointing arrow.
This is very important -- an explosion above the surface
or even just below the surface of the sun
does not agree with the standard theory of how a star works
but does agree with my theory.
This is the smaller ball-of-light explosively decaying. Note how the sunspot is still there after the explosion. Note how the shock wave from the exploding ball-of-light creates waves the ripple away from the center of the ejected ball-of-light, not from the center of the sunspot. Supposedly, the waves were over 2 miles high! Amazing! Only part of the sunspot decayed with a split decay mode. (See also, First Solar Explosion)
You may be interested to see a large animated GIF (334K) of this explosion in addition to this QuickTime animation. It may help explain what is happening here even better.
(See also, Stellar Impact)