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| 'VIRTUAL' STEREO PUT TO WORK TO DEFINE PRINCIPLES |
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A 'virtual' stereo view proves Andromeda flows out around a wide north/south expanse - it has round girth |
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| SHEETING |
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Notice also a rooster tail topology, which can be called a 'bi-lateral' symmetry, in that the forward left hem horizontally flares out and wraps around leftward, whereas the rear right hem arcs up in a vertical spray like a garden hose, the polar plane aspect of the two main sections that comprise Andromeda (left, and right) are typical of most all galaxies, which have similar bi-lateral symmetry A zoom across the mid section (from another photo) shows the vast horizontal plane in self evident truth, the core sitting in a depression is clearly flattish and oblong |
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Notice the core itself is also bi-lateral, the right end curling down, the left end sweeping up. this (core bi-lateral symmetry) is typical in galaxies
From 2 other versions the wide horizontal expanse to the rear rim is even wider in 3D |
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| TWO POLES - FRONT AND BACK |
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Notice how much ridging along the horizontal belts are actually vertically stacked analogous to layers of shale running an escarpment. Notice also fine cilia dragging back to Andromeda from the small elliptical galaxy, the cilia is not seen usually in Andromeda photos |
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Notice a spike sticking out from under the rim, aligned with the core. Though short and reedy, this spike is the marker of Andromeda galaxy's north/south symmetry, in keeping with the much longer east/west symmetry which allows itself seen in major formations (moires in the case of Andromeda). A rule is thus stated, that the symmetry markers of one pole axis in 4-way axial symmetry is very short, while the other marker blows up at the ends of both poles in the other axial symmetry pole pair, which is at right angles to the short marker pole pair, in Andromeda's case, the short pole marker is unseen behind the rear rim, the blowup pole markers the 'bullseye' and 'eye in the sky' moire contentrics cammed slightly in clockwise rotation at either end along the east/west axis, the slight clockwise turn of that symmetry axis entirely in keeping in lockstep with the slant of Andromeda's short north/south pole pair markers (the spike sticking out). And that, palms rubbing together print whorls going wssst wssst wssst, takes care of that The spike stiking out is too hard-copy to be random. Let us say then it marks one of the four poles of the galaxy, this pole expected to be matched by something behind the scenes on the far rear side of the galaxy, the pole canted at an angle which matches the slant of the core, the pole axle stiking out from below the rim tells us the motor of the central core is down in the socket rather than near the top of the glowing egg. Since this pole lays along the right side of the core, suspect the rearside other pole to lay along the left side of the core
Andromeda is a large disk in the sky, deep dish not a sickle cell. When two imaged are merged together by using muscle controlled eyesight to focus them, details of each image combine in a positively re-enforced way to amplify details which now sharpened and clear would be overlooked in a normal mono view. It also happens that latent 3D content inherent in the original photograph is also active in the merge. It was always thought by physicists that stereo could only occur by binoccular two image combination each image taken with a separate lens at from 6 inches to 6 feet apart. The advent of 'anaglyph' imaging as a way to create stereo views (using red and green stereo glasses) made from a single mono image, has established that mono pictures are stereo, the 3D in mono no worse than a poor quality binnocular stereo view but nowhere as breathtaking as full view binnocular stereo seen at its best. Here next a 'virtual' stereo look at the very wide panorama as you look across to the far horizon of the very tilted Andromeda which in fact is seen more on edge than from above, as you instantly learn in virtual stereo view. 'Virtual' means you see a 3rd 'virtual' picture (not physically there) in between two others when you merge the two images together by eyesight Original weakly shows little Here is the Andromeda original, reduced to caption size. As you can see the original shows nothing of the moire or wide flanges reaching out around the circumpherence in all directions, and underneath in vertical depth as well like a raisin cake. The original shows only dim weak colors and the center portion. The original film emulsions however stored a significant percentage number of weaker photons which leap to brightness when the image is highly enhanced
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Believe me I tried, couldn't find a full deep in space image of the solar wind and its effect on the Magnetosphere such as I recall by dejavu. This piece of art (left) is as close as I could find, cropped and skimped as it is Acknowledging that the two axis indicated by purple lines do not have the sift of advanced image techniques, they both are nonetheless accurate enough to show how the 4-way pole axis criss cross more or less directly through the center of Andromeda's core. The gravitic axis (east to west), where it ends, passes through to the rearside at the left to presumably pass through the center of the Eye in the Sky moire formation. If better images, better techiques, it should be possible to show how the south to north axis initiates below the forward rim, where a spike sticks out A Jupiter magnetic field schematic is good enough to show contoured rills in an open book fold - two sets facing each other. A bit of creative slight of hand creates an image showing interleaving, and bi-polar symmetry, of the moire rills Click here for solar magnetic page
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Web site/display/designs/image enhancements - Greydon Moore World's largest cosmic teaching site - Ottawa 2001/2004 form A & O 3 3 |
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