White-light flares are the flares with emissions visible in the optical
continuum. They are thought to be rare and pose the most stringent requirements
in energy transport and heating in the lower atmosphere. Here we present a
nearly circular white-light flare on 2015 March 10 that was well observed by
the Optical and Near-infrared Solar Eruption Tracer and Solar Dynamics
Observatory. In this flare, there appear simultaneously both impulsive and
gradual white-light kernels. The generally accepted thick-target model would be
responsible for the impulsive kernels but not sufficient to interpret the
gradual kernels. Some other mechanisms including soft X-ray backwarming or
downward-propagating Alfven waves, acting jointly with electron beam
bombardment, provide a possible interpretation. However, the origin of this
kind of white-light kernels is still an open question that induces more
observations and researches in the future to decipher it.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, published in Nature Communication