GRRRRR

As usual, a Chandra xray release is missing most of its content. This next below is of Stephan's Quintet colliding galaxies, enhancement shows almost the details of the optical (visible light view) a view which is missing in the Chandra original. Grrrrr - Chandra.

  to bottom   HIDDEN IN WELL KNOWN ASTRONOMY IMAGES ARE GREAT QUANTITIES OF MORE MASS. THE FOLLOWING ARE A FEW EXAMPLES

In
astronomy
images posted
for the public in the past
year few are spanking bright dazzling
detailed galaxy and local vista views filled
with entertainment and finds. Most research has
concerned with exploring dark and missing mass
as well as what era planet formations
first began, and distances into
the universe using near infra
red plus recently far infra
red (microwaves). So this
page is simply catching
up on a few images
which were
made
publically
available and which
had a great deal of hidden mass
in their dim media content, because being
a cursory display (not descriptive or definative),
many of the images are shown without source since most
being low-elegant were downloaded without making record
of their source. Hope no one has their feathers
titled if not seeing their name or their
telescope, the point is to show that
many astronomer's tend to be too
conservative in their image
examinations -GM.

  to bottom  
A SEARING XRAY JET FROM THE CENTER OF A GALAXY IS ACTUALLY A VERY LARGE CYLANDER SHAPED COHERENT FLOW TUBE BLOWTORCHING OUT OF A ROSE BOWL OF TOWERING WINDING ARMS

NGC 1068 BLOWTORCHES OUT OF A ROSEBOWL MADE OF ARMS

Original, with insert highly enhanced. After, are two closeups. The original photo capture took in the galaxy's rose bowl arms winding towering around the central blowtorch, the rose bowl arms are easily seen after enhancements.

Click for original as released by Chandra



Chandra image engineers have called the blowtorch 'the flashlight'.







Possible causes for the kink in the flashlight beam are suggested. A possible cause for the kink is two velocities and angles, that is, in the forefront area the blowtorch is blasting backward at an angle into a rearward torch that is firing up at a more vertical angle and at a higher velocity, absorbing completely a foreward more backangled torch.



I was somewhat surprised as to how much information was missing in the original chandra release. It was as if chandra only wanted to show that a flashlight existed, or did not know that their xray view had captured so much dim media contents including the rose bowl made of towering arm walls.

It seems possible that the source of the flashlight is blowtorching a forward cutting path, that is, the generating animal is slipstreaming forward within the windings of the rose bowl arms, a second clue suggesting a forward motion is a kink in the flashlight's beam, indicating a startup of forward motion(s) in the slipstreams. The rear part in the kink is more tail up, the lower part is slanted more horizontally toward us meaning the lower stream source is moving our way faster than before, or is canted less than before. The change in stalemate is seen at the kink.

It goes to cause two ways (without excrutiating uses of doppler motions)
as to whether the generator started moving forward, or the rose bowl
itself started easing backward leaving the much heavier generator
stationary in its own inertia. Looking out the window at the
train right next door and seeing it slowly start to move
accelarating until suddenly you are miles out in the
country - in the train station, without external
reference frame only outsiders are telling
if you, or that other train, is in motion,
(except of course go rumbles under
your seat if the tracks are rough
so your bottom feels commotion

  to bottom   IN XRAY - THE WHOLE OF AWESOME ROLL GALAXY M83

I am not sure what I was expected to find in this (next) chandra image of awesomely chaotic roll galaxy M83, also known as
Ngc 5236. The original (click on image at left for full size) is very dark with galactic arms brooding in the deeps of the darks.

Gamma density enhancement in an ordinary windows PC graphics editor, reveals the galaxy full sized (completely round shaped) with hot xray bright spots and densities throughout, the difference is these 'hidden' are low in fuel that generates xrays whereas the center area is fiery hot, which is perhaps what chandra image engineers wanted to show rather than the overall xray density of the galaxy.





  to bottom   NOTICE HOW MANY TIGHTLY WOUND COILS, THEN NOTICE WHERE THE COILS CAME FROM, HIDDEN IN A WELL KNOWN IMAGE

Click for original full size

Image source for tightly wound spiral galaxy Ngc 7742.







In spiral galaxy Ngc 7742, notice how many tightly wound arms there are around the spiral. The hubble Heritage original is shown at left in the 1st stereo pair above. No one knows of the tightly wound cochlia arms if they only know the Hubble Heritage image.

THE DUMBBELL NEBULA

The Dumbbell nebula is interesting enough to have its own page. More Dumbbell images are here



Gendler original at left, enhancement showing more of the bi-polar cowlings, at right. No fault (I was very happy to see this image) is assigned to density and media quality of the original. The entertainment is in seeing bi-polar cowlings for the first time in self evident clarity.

Click on image for full size



The globe in blue and red is not a sphere it is transparant (as digitally photographed entirely in hydrogen redlight), and irregular, the transparancy a fundamental feature seen in virtual stereo but not in mono by 2 dimensional eyesight.

(Go gently cross eyed, focusing the two images together, to see stereo separating, revealing how a mono flat plane is a completely mistaken interpretation).

It begins with the above image by Gendler, a medical doctor with a creative
capability for amateur astronomy digital images that make their way
into the forefront of ranking astronomy images sites such as APOD.
This gendler view of the Dumbbell Nebula M27 can be enhanced well
enough to show more clarity in the bi-polar percussion nodes on
either side (left and right). These seen so clearly here, are
interesting because similar can be glimpsed in many nebula
images, this is the first showing how small vertical
collars at outer edge distance from the center
star are common, see examples below. The
enhancement obscures the center star
but it is not that, it is the
bi-polar cowlings that I
find particularly
informative.



Along with a red vector firing out of the magnetic cone, tracers are seen firing from the hem as tiny red threads those around the cone engineered to obey something in the cone, altering their direction when firing from the hem. The red vector may be a blazer ray, which results when a super thin laser rays fires from a star so thin so high frequency it is not visible in the photo. When such a ray invisibly fires through mass it instantly becomes visible by exciting the mass. The resulting blazer ray is noticably irregular dense-thin-dense its length and dissapears and reappears when intermittantly running out of mass to ignite into plasma.

Three examples of long distance bi-polar cowlings are next, first is an image of the Blinking Eye nebula, explored at the blinking link and second a nebula I call Cinderella explored also. The original cinderella image shows two detached red flyers which are actually the ends of opposedly curved tubes of dim tenuous glowing material.

Cats Eye



Cinderella





THE GHOST OF JUPITER NEBULA

Original - blurry



The Ghost Of Jupiter Ngc 3242 nebula with a (red) pair of very bright bangles.

I have bracketed the word 'red' in assuming from professional captions that bangles photograph in red, except some appear in images rendered with false extra bright colors. (?) are they all naturally red (?).

These bangles are well illustrated, with a vertical cowling on the right from which issues the right 'bangle'. The image is fuzzy and quite vague but more than enough to illustrate what 'bangles' are. Even in mono, it can be seen that the left bangle points up and foreward, the right bangle down and away.

Astronomers have noted bangles and call them mysterious 'flyers', whose nature is a mystery. Me here at visitastronomy.com think otherwise. Reread all of the above topics and illustrations of bangles, and check their more detailed descriptions in the cross links. The subject is a bit too big, due to the number of nebulas involved, to put 'bangles' all in one page.

Percussion caps in the Butterfly nebula may be another form of bangles.

Another puzzling mystery, so-called 'blue flyers', are solved here.

NEBULA NGC 2371

This (at left) enhanced image of Ngc 2371 is shown here. I have been calling these busy little long distance vortexes 'bangles'.













   
AN ANTENNA GALAXY PHOTO RELEASE FROM A MAJOR TELESCOPE AUTHORITY AND ADMINISTRATION IS BEREFT OF CONTENT - SEE FOR YOURSELF

  to bottom   Click for original

When enhanced, this photo is one of the best yet to show the overall size and scale of these colliding galaxies and our current view of their topologies.







Enough is seen to realize substantial quantities of dim media mass (hidden) exist below and to the left, cropped, not seen, in this photo.

NEXT

An original, cropped of its ESO labelling. Practically nothing is seen until the image is enhanced. Period.



NEXT

Of particular interest is that the high loop, often looked at very closely by astronomers, is actually arcing into (or out of) a rearward vectored portal, in other words the arc is transvectoral at a substantial angle arcing forward declented from the wider front face cross section.

A suggestion is hinted that this may be an arm of yet another galaxy, a third, conglometated behind the scenes unseen except by clues such as the highly declented arc, it seems perhaps an arm stripped of dust and free gas, suggesting it is recently emerged into the open from behind the scenes, either by a foreward motion or by a rearward motion of the front faced other galaxy per se.





Green shows the portal better but being a typically intense light obscures details.

ESO shows an original image here with no explanation as to what special frequencies or techniques were used for the photo. A search of the ESO site came up fruitless, plenty of technicals on how to use the cameras and how to do photo shoots (universities have your credit card ready), but nothing about what was shot.

Cross reference   Antenna.htm   Tympani3.htm#antenna

Antenna (Ngc 4038) cross references in visitastronomy.com
Antenna.htm   Collide.htm   Cores.htm   Darkhole.htm   Globular.htm   Gravitic.htm   Hubble1.htm   Incise.htm   Jackknif.htm   Ngc4038.htm   Property.htm   Smoke.htm   Superfor.htm   Tympani3.htm

   
MASSIVE SPIRAL GALAXY IS BARELY SEEN AS A DIM TRACE IN OFFICIAL PHOTO, IS BLURRED BUT PLENTY SELF EVIDENT IN SIZE, AND IS SPHERICAL IN SHAPE, IN UNOFFICIAL ENHANCEMENT

Click for full size original
Click for screen size original
Click for screen size enhanced


When enhanced, a galaxy not there leaps into view. The details are dim to begin with and further whiteded out slightly by the extreme level used in density level increase to reveal the full size unmistakeably.





A diffuse wide drift trailing behind in the upper left incidates a real time travel vector at a shallow inclination proceeding foreward into the lower right foreground.

Faint parallel streaking in upslants along the left side is a bit of a mystery, it cannot be said if poor overall resolution has created the streaks or if these are fundamentally out there at this galaxy.



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