INCISES HAVE SHARP EDGES
PRISMATICS
SOME ARE LIKE LENSES
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Incises may have cause in astronomy photography, certain frequencies used
for capture not radiant in material where then missing photocopy appears
as an anomaly with incise boundry edges the boundries can be circular,
arced, and straight edged, and often enough can represent media from
two different galaxies mixing in a collision.
Lenses, a different class of incise, may be refractory indexes from
super hot or powerful centers of objects such as globular clusters and
nebulas.
Incises may also be a factor of polarization in light but I do not
know enough about polarization to say so, except to cite a sample
image showing strong polarization
in light effects.
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INCISED EDGES IN HEXAGRAM RIM OF A TYMPANI RESONATOR
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Very sharp
incise in upper hem
of tympani hexagram cavity in Ngc 4038
A major
circular incise makes
a cavity in Ngc 1232 associated
with the notorious Jack Frost formation
More
An incise lens in M101.
It
doesn't
end here. These
three color tone zooms
have revealed an eerie dark
patch in the upper right. The eerie
turns out definately to be some kind of
density lens, something is refracting a
large area as if peering into a lens,
right there. What causes lenses in
galaxies is a mystery. LMC is
ridden with giant optically
altering lenses, one
is a large
swath
The
'lens' almost
looks like a patching
error caused when telescope
small image segments are matched together
to form a large single composite view, the viewer
not knowing the several even several hundred small
bits of image accutely focused were merged to
form the final product. Here, eight chips
via a revamped Kitt's Peak video
electronic telescope image
were combined to make
a single large
color shot.
Even so,
the patching
error conjecture fades
away fast in close zoom, since the
'lens' seems to be round, and roundness does not
happen in patching errors which are invariably straight edged
An incising lens centered on top of a woodtick gliding along an
arm of Ngc 1365
Another view shows a dynamo.
A very similar looking object, including a transparent lens cap, has
turned up in M63.
An
incise cuts
a broad swath across a
substantial portion of the LMC,
the incise seems to be the edges of
borders between two different
galaxies in collision,
comprising the LMC
A serious
incise in a Chandra
X-ray image of a
pulsar with a
nebula known only as PSR B1509-58 in
the constellation Circirnus, the Chandra
original does not show the incise it
may be a flaw in the image but
if not, major incise
The original
shows only a black
corner with no qualifying
media surrounding, the square is
without any reference reason
MAJPR GIANT INCISING LENSES
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Major
giant incises
from a collision in
progress is examined here,
where another galaxy named
'glommer' is right now
fixating changes
in LMC
Incises
pepper a Hubble
long range view of the
Tarantula Nebula in LMC
(the Large Magellanic Cloud)
Many
of the above
abrupt light-dark rumples
are image patching errors. An incising lens
centered over the Doradus intense
star field is shown next
Above images are in context here.
Galaxies superstructures fill surrounding space
An incise
in deep space
near 3 galaxies in
the Draco constellation.
More here
Click on image strip for large
| IN THE EGG NEBULA - NGC 2688
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INCISE 'FOOT' AT THE CENTER OF THE EGG NEBULA
Above Egg-foot images are in context here.
The Egg nebula at large in context with planetary orbital signatures
here
| MAJOR INCISE IN THE TRIANGULUM GALAXY
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A major
incise comes
out from the lower
end of the bright galaxy
and arcs broadly up the right side,
the incise clearly marked in boundry of
two different media densities inside
the broad arc and outside. Is it
possible the broad arc is
either stripped clean
of a certain kind
of matter, or
is a residual
of another galaxy,
for instance Andromeda
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Web site/display/designs/image enhancements - Greydon Moore
World's largest cosmic teaching site - Ottawa 2001/2004
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