CORKSCREW AND SLASHES AT SPIRAL GALAXY M51

Vestigial   outline   of an original 2 arm bar galaxy
Integral   arms   connect two interacting galaxies

Related page   Integral

COMPARING SIMILAR CENTER EYES IN CATSEYE SHAPED GALAXIES

This is a browse section, read at leisure

EXAMPLES

ngc 1097 ngc 1300 ngc 1512 ngc 6782 m94

m83 global galaxy
m100 global galaxy
ngc 1232 global galaxy
ngc 6951 global galaxy

Xyz axis topology     Mystery streak

Related pages   Bigger-1.htm   Bigger-2.htm   Superbig.htm


CLOSELY WOUND GLOBAL GALAXY M83

The following is an Ultra violet image by Galex. A hot knot of tightly wound interacting arms from merger collision. M83 is also known as Ngc 5236. The Galex telescope Ultraviolet image of M83 is blurred so subtle details are not available.





This galaxy is another case in point - a nested gimble topology. But, more chaotic. The dense flanging arms up the right flank shank forward crinkled into nearspace toward us. The rattlesnake's tail is easily seen sticking out, well within the confines of the galaxy's overall global stragedy, whose superstructure is revealed in Ultra violet frequencies (we see all of it, in Ultraviolet).

NEXT

The superform in optical (visible) light looks much the same, the global (spherical) superform is scarcely witnessed in a highly enhanced Dss black and white image.



The rattlesnake's tail sticking out is a most pronounced right side feature. In black and white it seems isolated, in the Ultra violet image above it is within a greater global body.

The best available earlier photo for enhancement revealing superform (the black and white photo above) has fewer arms around the outside than does the Ultra violet image above. The black and white shows the very active center scene, and little of the outer bounds where long reaching encircling arms are seen in Ultra violet.

M83 (NGC 5236) IS A VORTEX GALAXY - STRUNG OUT A LONG DISTANCE FRONT TO REAR

Sloop - a shallow ski slope curving all the way into the center core which is a long long way in from the rattlesnake's tail, which is roughly two thirds of the way out to the galaxy's supersize outer rim. The galaxy stretches out along a long Z axis (depth).



The sloop images above are from an earlier study here.

Next, this spectacular rotated view shows how, a greater sense of how far away the central core is from the forejutting rattlesnake's tail.

Pulled back view, highly enhanced, reveals a tightly wound cylander of standup walls around the middle, the center of the cylander sliced open.





The silverado conning tower rises vertically to the right with a flat oval end, seen face on. The upright flat faced vertical elongation shown highlighted in green color tone, is a clipped off (trunkated) arm. In different perspective due to orientation, in galaxy Ngc 3370 a similar clipped broad flat arm is identified as the Silverado or conning tower, rising up in the midst of a Hubble image of Ngc 3370.

Next the black and white again, showing the large silverado crossing diagonally across the top.



The color original was not very good albiet state of the art in its time, hence a rather glarrish outlook has resulted in attempting to enhance and highlight distinct features, such as the 'silverado' shown in the above green color tone highlighted window. A silverado is a thin broad band of arm sawed off abruptly producing a characteristic flat face.

ARM STUMP AND DOBBLER

Sawed off arm leaks fluid.

A dobbler leaks out of a trunkated (sawed off) arm stump. The rattlesnake's tail extending to the right, is conjoined with the dobbler artifact, perhaps both were caused by the same arm cutting event, occurring when matter of one galaxy sweeps past another completely wiping away structure, in a collision.





A dobble reveals a bleeding arm stump, a thick arm has been sliced off by collision, something within the arm (like fluid marrow) is dribbling out, called a dobber because it looks like a dob.

More Ngc 5236 images featuring the dobbler and arm stump, are here.

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Truncated arm View 1 - conning tower in M83
Truncated arm View 2 - sloughed off weeping arm in M83
Truncated arm View 3 - conning tower called silerado in Ngc 3370
Truncated arm View 4 - chopped off arm with piece of core rod sticking out in Ngc 3314

View 1

View 2

View 3

View 3a

View 4

View 4a

View 4b

There has been rapid clockwise rotation at the center. The arm that did the deed (sloughed another leaving a trunkated arm) may be what is now further descended, tucking below the coredeck and ploughing up rubble extending in a tubular way to the right. See if you can fit the picture in mind's eye, it is not easy to explain in a few words.



Clue - if this is being interpreted correctly, the bunchup on the right side is from a descending revolving curved arm shoving underneath, as a major motion slews to the right, descending. A descending rightward glide is speculative. Anyone who can come up with a better mechanical description (reason) wins the coveted beer foam award.

Silverado galaxy Ngc 3370 has its own page, named Ngc 3370-1.htm.

A lengthy study on the Ngc 3314 collision is in the Ngc 3314.htm page. This is a very long description with many links to other pages.

More M83 (Ngc 5236) images are here and here

LONG ARMS GLOBAL SPHERE GALAXY NGC 6951

NGC 6951

The three dimensional form of Ngc 6951 is much bigger than first realized in that it has a topology modelled by a worm nest with mamma in the middle, rather than modelled by any warped frisbee. Each arm arcs through a different plane in 3d space outlining not a disk but a sphere around a core.

Photo by Bill McLaughlin.





Coaxed from an extemely dim faint small Dss image of Ngc 6951.



Ngc 6951 is a global galaxy, it is a fully round ball as is a gyroscope in a three way gimble, this is not a galaxy with a pronounced rooster tail as are most galaxies expecially galaxies with only two arms.

Ngc 6951 has many angular momentums, effecting different arms, segments of arms, and different plateau states in the bright center region.

A small black straight line slash aimed left below the core is a striation from collision.

A rather good description of angular momentum in the act of processing, involves Boris at the Whirlpool galaxy.

GLOBAL GALAXY M100

Next, M100 is also a gyroscope in a 3-way gimble, each layer of M100 proceeding inward (there are three layers in M100, rotating at slightly different velocities and at slightly different cams (tilts), the inner core region the fastest revolving and most cammed. The velocity differentials are not high so without awareness of the three-zone layer construction of M100 observers would not be aware of the three main velocity slipstreams.

THREE RATES OF COHERENT ANGULAR MOMENTUMS IN M100

HOW TO INTERPRET THE 3 MOMENTUMS

The above link is a rigorous interpretation of complex seeming topologies which have simple straight forward answers.



Assume at least two galaxies writhing in collision and merger in M100.

LONG ARMS GLOBAL GALAXY NGC 1232

A gyroscope in a 3-way gimble.

NGC 1232

This galaxy is another case in point - a nested gimble topology. The tiny spindle galaxy externally nearby at lower left may be an orbiter repeatedly interacting with the giant neighbor, causing some of the ruckus the giant neighbor is experiencing.



There is a horizonal shelf crossing latterally just below the core. This is easily explained as an arm close (to the care) arcing horizontally outward toward us.







More Ngc 1232 in the 3d-1232e.htm page. Ngc 6951 has a similar arangement at the core (horizontal slash) with the core dynamo turned to the side, and the horizontal arm arcing out in the opposite direction to Ngc 1232.



Ngc 6951 differs fundamentally in having obvious smokey stacked arms, that is, at least three horizontal arms are stacked below all vectoring in synch to the west, plus vertically vectored stacked arms plowing out into the east. Thin stacked arms can be seen in Ngc 1232 issuing to the left from below the left side of the core. It means a similar design engineering in plasma flowing controllers is evident in at least these two galaxies.

CATS EYE BAR GALAXY NGC 1300







NGC 1300 GIANT ARM

Polyps of bright hot new blue stars seeming growing out into deep space along the outer edge of the right arm, are actually sizeable bursts cresting the upper edge of a much larger arm which is very thick, and rolls both dimly and diffusely into rear space, the size of the large arm is in the photo but not seen until enhanced revealing dim media hidden contents in the original image.





NGC 1300 CENTER EYE

The eye is not flat - thick extremely unfeatured ropes loop up and around outside the core.



Around the center itself tight vertical wall clouds wind around the eye.





Most of the core (eye) is irregular, that is, shelfs like eyelids slicking over rise up along leading edges at the left and rights sides of the central figure, which itself contains vertical and horizontal components.

These details of the core were achieved by working the image backward, in reducing the gamma density to a point where details became salient by being more obviously separated in different tones of the predominating dusty rose colors.

This center eye has a pimple core, that is, the tiny hot tongue of the innermost core is sticking up, flaring out toward us. Such a core is commonplace in spiral galaxies.






At first glance it would be easy to mistake the center eye of Ngc 1300 with the center eye of Ngc 6782 (at right from a dim Hubble image), in comparison, beside the eye of Ngc 1300.

Next below is another center eye in comparison.

These eyes are all similar in being small and circular within their galaxy's elliptical cat's eye superstructures.





NGC 1097 CENTER EYE



The center eye is surrounded by intensely hot (white) leading edges of small fronds in vertical upthrusts arrayed in two main bisymmetric swirls around the core.

NGC 1097

Galaxy Ngc 1300 is very similar to the style and feel of galaxy Ngc 1097, whose detailing images can be seen here.

Full scale Hubble Ngc 1097



The above Hubble image contains less than full tank. The supersize is larger, seen next in a Dss photo.



NGC 6782

Hubble view in black and white, colorized to reveal details of the central areas more easily seen.





At right, a larger superstructure of outer arms in two lobes is very dimly seen in a dss view.

If Ngc 6782 has large outer area windings comprising a superstructure, it is not visible in the dim Hubble image (left) which shows a central cats eye ellipse with a circular eye core at center. At left, the dim Hubble Heritage view highly enhanced, reveals traces of outer arms.

M94

M94 has a large superstructure wrapping around the galaxy's inner elliptical cats eyes. Two lobes around the cats eye are dimly seen in a Dss view.



The right view is extra exuberant in supplying mass image density, after histogram equalize fleshed out minute contrasts.

NGC 1512

The eye of Ngc 1512



The superstructure of Ngc 1512 includes a different mold. Long extremely thin tendrils wind around at great distances out from the main body, a telltale sign that a collision has occurred sometime within the galaxy's visibly remembered history.



NGC 5754 PHOTO BY HST



An Hst picture with dim media gloom, actually has more arms. The Hst is not able to reveal in a glance whether the small galaxy on edge at lower right is interacting with the biggie.



If wondering about the mass contained in this galaxy, look to its master topology - not unlike looking down the top of a cinnamon roll bun whose shape has been made by two slabs of dough rolled into a cylinder adding significant depth to the slabs, the vortex into the center itself an insink deep in depth from the outer surface made of arms which arc up out of the well. The XYZ axis completely changes the estimate of mass made from XY axis only, the expanded mass estimate effects all parts and motions of the galaxy at large.



NGC 1300 MYSTERY WHITE STREAK





More detailed inspection will reveal if the white line streak is a coincidence or an artifact with an interesting cause.

More images detailing galaxies Ngc 6782 and M94



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