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Integral Arms in galaxies






Galaxy arms can have
enough integral strength their
length to shove or push matter around or
aside while keeping their shape as a precise arm.
Some arms emerge, then disappear again diving into portals
or tunnelling into dense matter, indicating a current polarity which
can strengthen an arm its length (like a hydro line or lab wire
which grows rigid when juice flows through it), indicating
that galaxy arms have poles at both ends, one pole
buried in the core the other end meandering
around and dissipating in surrounding
deep space when not connected
to an opposite pole, and
when the other arm
pole is also
connected
to core
fields
the arm
remains thin and
rope-like and can be of shorter kind

M51 - AN INTEGRAL ARM CAUSES A MONUMENTAL GRAVITATIONAL 'PINCH'

A piece
of arm has been
jambed by another (an
integral arm) and is being pulled
sideways, even as the arm above begins to
slide over the pinch and the pinching arm
goes behind due motions in counter
clockwise rotation of the
diskface







See more M51 here


The
significance
of the 'pinch' is that
all of those lateral slashes
connecting straight to the nearby
small intense object are hauling charlie,
pulling matter over to it from behind the
whirlpool front face, the front face
being physically deformed by it,
the upper deck actually
sliding over the
lower arm


      MORE INTEGRAL ARMS      


INTEGRAL DISK (ARM) IN THE 'FISH' COLLIDING GALAXIES


Called 'the fish' because it looks like a fish

Looking
for integral
arms that link galaxies
here is another, turned up in high
enhancement of Hubble's image of NGC 2207
the integral arm is very short, a
brief crescent across center
between the two fish,
an integral
'disk'





See more 'fish' here



INTEGRAL DISK (ARM) IN COLLIDING GALAXIES CENTAURUS A








The
drift shaft
looking device in
the rod shaped core bore
to the left of center is a key
piece in the puzzle of
galaxy behaviors






These
above another
photograph are featured
here 1 and here 2
Dusting galaxies have more than one integral arm


In
another
example, an
'integral' arm is
slicing like a can opener
into the side of an elliptical
galaxy. This is seen in highly
enhanced images of a pair
of colliders known as
the 'Dusting'
galaxies




There
is a 'snub'
sticking up at the
right end of the spiral galaxy.
See more about 'snubs' in galaxies   here.
Galaxy dust envelopes turn galaxies shining through yellow





It takes
a bit of work
to show the Integral
Arm slicing into the side of
the elliptical like a can opener. The
final two images above are good enough to show
this. Note that the right end of the small spiral galaxy
is snubbed up like a bob-o-link's tail, a result of the
fender bender collision with the elliptical. If you
rotate the spiral a few degrees clockwise and
then slide it over to the right, you
will see that its right edge
fits correctly into the
right edge of the
chisle in
the
giant
elliptical
like a piece of
a jigsaw puzzle, showing
exactly how the 'dusting' encounter
has occured as the small spiral continues rearward
on a trajectory heading outward and beyond to the left

Another
integral arm is
like a vacuum cleaner
hose, snuffed up against the upright
right snub of the rear spiral, the snub obviously
an impact factor since 'snubs' are not easily
seen in all galaxy images, except here is
one, the 'snub' almost the same in
scale size as is the main
central disk to which
the snub is beholden



A SECOND 'UPRIGHT' HOB OF BRIGHT LIGHT

The
rear small
spiral may be two
small spirals in a wrangle
(colliding). Take a look and see if
you can detect the evidence of two, not one,
small galaxies, the second standing up
like a sunlamp over the rear end
of the more horizontal other.
In fact, are not talons
from the smaller
upright
rear
sinking
down into the lower
horizontal member of the pair, is
this not like sci fi movies in which humans
become machines and start sending out tendons
hooking into things and start taking over, the tendons
sinking down into the lower horizontal are of unknown
purpose unknown cause none have ever been seen
before in galaxies. Inspector Luminous bobs
the bald spot with a waggy finger and
pauses to snort a deep breath.
How to describe the tendrils
that 'sink in', is not
going to be easy

Hookup slashes from rope-like long integral arm












BODES GALAXY - TWO ROPES

Two ropey
long thin arms
plug into a right
cloudwall of vertically
banked dense matter, so
you know at once that
the ropey arms are
longer than
what we
actually see


More on the subject of the two ropey arms entering the cloudwall


GRAVITY WAVE CONNECTS TWO HOT REST STATE MASSES


Integral
arms can be seen
rigidly tethered in the side
of the rear object in this colliding
pair known as the Silhouette galaxies, which is
telling us in no uncertain terms that in order for
the arms, one dominant (right) in particular, to
be plugged into BOTH galaxies, the arms have
to have POLES, one at either end of each
of the arms, and (like electricity)
each end pole of a different
polarity, otherwise if
mere gravity was
the powering
force,
the
gravity
tugging at both
ends would simply pull
the arms apart breaking them.
Here, the longest integral arm seems to be
wrapping around behind the far outside right perimeter
in a science fiction illustration or image from Star Trek. A
logical way for a sci fi winding like this to occur is
for the foreground spiral to be rotating counter
clockwise (while drifting foreward on a
trajectory slewing to the left),
with the rear elliptical
rotating in the
opposite
direction,
clockwise. This
is logically easier than
assuming the elliptical is stationary. A
'tensil' strength giving the winding arm strength over
such long graceful distance is suggested by thoughts found here.
Actually, more 'thoughts' suggest a 'gravity wave' is plugged in at
both ends, into each galaxy - a positive pole at one end of the
gravity plugged into a negative pole in one galaxy, and visa
versa. A long thin wave of gravity is far more suitable
for the task than a quasi or psuedo cosmic string.
The gravity wave, being energy, as opposed
to rest state mass, can flex and
bend as needed without
destroying basic
physics







A halo
around the
rear galaxy, and
to its left, in the blast
images above, concentric circles
show formations only faintly glimpsed
in this maxed out extreme in image resolution

Trying
to work this
image of the 'silhouette'
galaxies in an image editor has been like
trying to make a house out of silly putty. Enhancements
deemed to amplify understanding of the halo of the elliptical galaxy
to the rear has caused other interesting details to vanish, and
visa versa. The one thing finally after more than two years
is a glimpse of the shelf extending horizontally out
around the right edge of the elliptical galaxy,
a shelf which makes this construction
completely at home with science
fiction illustrations that
show a strand from one
galaxy wound around
another. And here
we have that
very image
in deep
space

ACCRETION STREAMS BETWEEN TWO GALAXIES

Winding thin threads of accretion between galaxies (long predicted by astronomers) can be seen in a striking example called the 'Silhouette' colliding galaxies where a long thin winding works from the left side of the foreground galaxy around behind the left side of the other galaxy in the rear, 'silhouetting', giving this pair their name.

In fact, several short streams also co-join, probably recently set up. The longer wind shows relative motion as to how one galaxy has been moving and rotating relative to the other.

The long thin accretion stream is ambiguous, the image views do not show if the accretion is streaming to the foreground, or rearground, galaxy, however the several more recent short links have a look and feel as if matter is being sucked from the forward's mantle into the lower mantle hem edge of the rear galaxy. We can infer sucking by the fact that the short streams narrow as they enter portals. This is consistent with smoke streams from fires and volcanoes seen on Earth.

We also infer directly a referential frame regards motions, the foreground galaxy is moving laterally to the left relative to any other motions of the rear galaxy.

















The
spiral is
very disturbed, that
is, it winds into the center core
at sharp angles, the inner windings toward
the fiddlehead core flipped far more sharply to the
left compared to the looser windings around the
lower outer edge. In short, the overall
shape is more a tube or torpedo,
definately not a disk per se

An arm
in such haziness
it hardly registers, lifts
from the top of the rear guy
and arcs to the left, about
as distinct as a duffle
bag under a carpet

Small
yellow objects
shine dimly through obscuring hazes







In fact
once exposed
by enhancers, the rear
galaxy is not unlike Boris at the Whirlpool



Both
Boris, and
the small rear number
above, seem perhaps dwarf elliptical
galaxes which have had part of their amorphous mantles
blown away revealing seriously dynamic hot inner cores and halos

The original
of the 'dusting'
galaxies shows little
of the expanded mantle of the
giant elliptical foreground galaxy. A
small yellow dob in the original is a galaxy
either in the mantle or behind, if behind, it could be
used to access the mantle media density and how nuch
light is getting through from deep space behind



BUMPING GALAXIES CALLED 'PREVIEW'


This
masterpiece
cruised into my computer
from the Internet, skimpiest in detail
yet able to show some of the greater form of this
colliding pair, whose seething empire is seen
in one of the few Hubble public releases
that was not spit and polished into
a masterpiece of showmanship.
The only name I had for
it is 'Preview', the
name of the
Hubble
image


NGC 1738 - galaxies said by pros to be 'bumping together'



Yo! TWO integral arms - Inspector Luminous dances backwards
when THIS is discovered

       

Notice
that two long
thin arms still INTACT
in the lower galaxy, tunnel into
holes into the side of the upper bigger.
This instantly tells you a lot about arms. Arms
are integral, that is, they can hold their shape in states
of great disruption surrounding and in fact can hold shape so
strongly as to seriously disturb surrounding mass forms. For
instance in the Whirlpool is the 'pinch', caused by an
arm directly attached to a small nearby extremely
energetic remote galaxy, the attached arm
still 'integral' with enough strength
flowing through it to push mass
sideways, forming the pinch.
It is strongly suspected
by a moi that current
flows through arms,
where both ends
of an arm are
attached to
core parts
the arm
can have
the kind of
strength found in
downed hydro wires or laboratory
wires which can become rigid when current flows
through them pole to pole (one end to the other). The fact
of two arms tunnelling intact into the side of another galaxy
indicates a rigidity exists in the arms allowing them to
keep shape enough to alter the form and shape
of matter beyond and around the arms

Footnote

The above
image does not
seem to be archived
or gallery collected in any
Hubble sites or major image showcases.
As said above it was spotted once in surfing and
downloading with a vague memory that the artist was Hubble,
otherwise, nothing since has been found about it by me,
who, eager for more, has been looking for it
again for over 3 years. No luck - GM

An integral
arm in Ngc 6300, it
issues from a portal at
the right edge of the core dish.
This galaxy has two cores. It
seems to have parts that
don't belong anywhere




NGC 4567

Then
comes this, from the Subaru electronic telescope run from Japan











Closeup
reveals the
integral arms more
as outcrops of different
media than as actual rope-like
spiral arms tethering from
one galaxy into the
flank of the
other







The Subaru original does not show the full size of these galaxies



The
part of
the brain which
has the worn out squirrel
in the little cage has kicked in with a
recall from 3 years ago, the image named 'preview'
was a preview image from a Hubble proposals site,
and, as you can see, Subaru has provided a
nice clear image, with a name Ngc 4567

It can
be seen that
the smaller galaxy
is sideswiping the larger
scooping away its lower half leaving
rubble without forms. It is not clear exactly
what motions the smaller galaxy has in its sideswipe.
It looks possible that the lower left region of the smaller
galaxy was in upper right position as the collide started
and has rotated down anticlockwise, but, this does not
explain how the integral arm can be now plugged
from the upper right end of the smaller
into the lower right end of the
large cruise ship. Another
sidewiping pilferation
is currently just
finishing at
Ngc 6745,
a dip of
tendrils
still links
the giant bananna boat
to the sideswiper offscreen to the right

Hobs
be dammed.
Inpector Luminous
whamps a fist into soft thought
and instantly sharpens the ledges. Are
these not talons digging into the side of
a galaxy from the other galaxy. The
Inspector wipes a bad idea
away and gets to
work at once
staging
the
hobbing
talons in Virtual 3D
to show the academy, this time Luminous
won't be sitting in a vibrating chair that knocks too loudly



The
chair starts
vibrating again, this
time for very good reason the
chair already on the glide at high speed
toward two other images which urge for explanation
the Inpector already liking before the chair glides
to a stop. The above upright spiral collider is a
perfect example which could explain how large
spiral galaxies can get so wrangled and
smoothed in diced up collisions
without being clobbered
in total disarray
or left with
yo-yos

The bumping
two are chaotic 74
and strange Ngc 4414, their
smoooothed areas already in sight
in the above image which in fact is right now
in the act of smoothing the outer right edge of the
larger spiral galaxy. Inspector grins about this,
it is always nice to have a smoking pun
when it comes to astronomy

It gets
better. The
Inpector cannot help
but notice how so perfectly
jigsaw the pieces fit, telling the
exact path of motion and initiation of the
encounter, in other words, telling the two galaxy's
motions one against the other. The smaller galaxy
has entered the area lower left to continue gliding
along the outer helm of the bigger, smoothing
the bigger's outer arms, the smaller galaxy
now above is about to depart out of the
picture, the chisle in the right side of
the upright the jigsaw piece telling
exactly where the upright spiral
first climped into the larger
at the start of the hit and
run collision. Luminous
is ready to proclaim,
this real piece of
news analysis is
well worth an
email or two
a shout is
out because
at this moment
no one will hear
thinks the Inspector



In fact
it gets a whole
lot better. The trashed
top end of the upright, rags facing
east, are where the collision first started,
trashing what once was the western galaxy edge,
the fact the rags are now at the top shows
how much the upright has actually
rotated clockwise since the
collision first started

Ooops Luminous back
tracks, rather
than that
is this
may be
instead
where some
outer eastern
reaches of the large
galaxy first encountered the rising
upright spiral before the upright spiral moved in
turn to first climp the side of the larger horizontal spiral galaxy

Enough
is enough!
shouts someone
in a vigorously vibrating
chair, do we really need to read
all this!. Yes, says the Inspector, you do

NGC 1738



Here
is what
keeps turning up
for NGC 1738, everywhere.
I know, says Inspector Luminous.
Try this. Wait, I found a better one no
sorry it helps not either but I see papers
have been written about it, someone
getting famous, with an image
like this? Oooooh
why?

Long thin tendril links two in the final stages of rolling sideswipe at Ngc 6745. Rolling means the flea has rolled over the banana boat from the upper left to the lower right. Definately a gravity glue is linking the two. I know, says Inspector Luminous.


NGC 6745



Integral arm shoots out from under the skirt (canopy)
at lower left in Bodes Galaxy




Arm vents
straight out
the underside canopy
of Bodes Galaxy and elbow at a
sharp right angle turn, the mechanics of
such phenomena not unknown on Earth where volcanic
plumes reaching a density light enough, sheer in vector
from a striaght upward thrust to a hard right angle
usually at the ceiling (state change) of the next
upper layer in Earth's atmosphere, in the
case of the arm in Bode's galaxy the
'change in state' is when the arm
enters the deep cold of
outer space













Once
again notice
the thick vertical
underdeck (it has been
mentioned eleswhere). Unlike a
doily spread on the arm of granny's
stuffed chair, Bodes galaxy is very like a
thick pastromi sandwich, literally, from out
which spoots the integral arm, doing things
like coming out on its own angle, taking
an intense jog backward, spoiling
the happy days of physicists
everywhere

Notice
also the
number of tiny
little spriglets sticking
out from along the upper inner rim.
What these are are anybody's quess, certainly
not mine. But oh the physics spoiling scientist's
best days. The answer, whatever it is. is
going to be very interesting



More about Bodes underdeck throughout here


NGC 4414 has integral arm plugged right in the side


From
the side of
NGC 4414 an arm
initiates a strong outthrust
into space laterally to the
left plane of the
galaxy





An
integral
arm out the side
of giant spiral galaxy
NGC 4414, in this case the
base of the arm with a dominant
dynamic formation formed of wave
compressions of stupendous power,
this coherent formation also
hassled here catagorized
as 'tympani resonator'

Long solo arm in giant spiral galaxy M101



In
another
big photo, the
long arm is soooo long
it is gone right off picture





Above
black and
white is the original,
from NOAO. Color tones to
show the details are by
Greydon Moore




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