to bottom   LMC - two different galaxies are merging, one wrapped around the other, scattering red flyers are departing under impetus of charge push

LARGE MEGALLANIC CLOUD IS A MERGING GALAXY

Charge field differences in different polarity may explain what is happening at LMC and its fractures, incises, and prisms, the other galaxy merging, is of the opposite electric charge to the LMC.

One of the galaxies is bright and diffuse, the other galaxy's material is wrapped around and somewhat opaque (dark), causing precise incise edges (as if scribed by a graphic artist) where the edges of one galaxy meet the other.

More images at the LMC page


CYCLONNIC BULGE IN LMC IS ANOTHER GALAXY MERGING

The LMC, a very small neighborhood galaxy, so small it is only a pip in Dss images, enhances into a multi pole object with a pronounced vertical bun dominating the top in the orientation of these views, from an Noao large photo that begin next.

Abrupt differences in media densities and color tones under high enhancement, point to two galaxies, an LMC and another partially merged, the result of a merger currently underway. LCM is rife with prisms and cyclonnics all suggestive of extremely energetic local heat and pressure entropy exchanges, plus prisms and radials from impacts by red flyers whirling around, including the Tarantula

The impression is that some of the concentric circle rings are not prisms by changes in refractions. Rather, these may be stars in necklace orbits around intense attractors which are invisible in optical light.









Even stars which seem gridlocked in straight lines are actually motored in very tight circles. The stars of LMC, obeying fundamental dynamic ordering rules, all seem the same size per necklace, large, while stars stretching in barrel stave streaks arcing between two powerful nodes, are all small. Interesting when someone is able to solve why such precise filtering of sizes can occur.

There is probability that certain brillient bright incise straight edges are in the image patching creation by compositing smaller photos in one larger. Many edges seem too geometrically euclidean to have been made by graviity.







A radial smash - something inpacted here creating a radial spray pattern with cyclonnic ovals surrounding the smash at different elevations in planes and several different diameters. A v-shaped chisle below the radial is where the impactor entered.

The path of a red flyer (seen partially whitened by enhancements at top right screen) is seen as twin parallel outlines of roil which is the trail left behind by the red flyer. Where the red flyer first impacted the side of LMC a reverse percussive explosion bulges outward beyond the galaxy flank as a blunt point nub.There are two parallel streaks leading directly focused to the red flyer.







The radial concentric more in mid picture seems to be of an entirely separate cause whose source is not self evident. The next view ( more here) shows a red flyer (first above in space at right) shows a drag path right through the radial concentric showing it the likely the smoker causing that radial, the red flyer punched through the galaxy from behind in its glide path on the way to outer space.



The drag path arcs back to the V cleave in the forward leading galaxy edge so here is where the red flyer entered, it impacted into the side of the galaxy's foreward flange and re-emerged in the middle, rather than punching through from behind.

NEXT - THE BIG COWLING

A rudimentary cowling opens forth, facing left and upward off the left end of the yellow bannana.









A vertical bulge in the midrift reaching from the bottom up the side, is a rudimentary version in LMC, of a silverado, seen in full majesty here.



STREAKERS LEAVE TRAILS FROM LARGE MAGELLANIC CLOUD LMC

Streakers stream north into distant red clumps, from LMC. Streakers made of drawn out stars string north from LMC to remote flyers, showing the flyers (collision rubble of charge field opposite to the main charge of the LMC galaxy) flew out of LMC, ejected at high velocity, dragging stars with them, leaving visible trails

STREAKERS LEAVING GALAXY LMC

















PRISMATIC STAR CONCENTRICS

Prismatic star concentrics off the south west end of the Tarantula.

In the Prisms.htm page, these have been called 'shin plasters'.

More Tarantula here and here

More stars in necklaces and concentrics at the necklaces page.













  email     home   Web site/display/designs/image enhancements - Greydon Moore
World's largest cosmic teaching site - Ottawa 2001/2004    

    form   A & O 3 3                 to top  

                  Click google logo for site search
  Click for site search  

For the world's most comprehensive searches use   Visit Webcrawl


  Click for Industrial Strength Astronomy home  
  New Proton Page     New Physics Index  
  Crash course   Fast crash course in astronomy
More advanced at top of home




Available Downloads

DRUMBALLIA    ODDESSY    CLIFFR    CONTACT