ASTRONOMY ANOMALIES
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You must read the text to understand the images
SNUBS IN GALAXIES
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Snubs
may be a
telltale signature
of galaxy collisions, both recent
and obvious, and old. If a snub is seen in a
galaxy picture, suspect it is tied to a collision. A snub
is a source from which issues an 'Integral arm', though not all
integral arms issue from snubs. An image
concept for snubs is
they look like the tail of a Bobcat, and can range in scale
from very small, to very large comprising a good
portion of a galaxy's overall size. A
platen, a form of snub, is
seen in Ngc 4603, also
in Ngc 5236
| SNUB EXAMPLE 1, IN THE 'DUSTING'
COLLIDING GALAXIES
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There
is a 'snub'
sticking up at the
right end of the spiral galaxy.
See more about 'snubs' in galaxies
here
5236 - snail's foot curled up
A snub in
NGC 5236, this snub
comes out and waves in your face
Two scaling factors - near/far
A snub
in M74, this
snub is closer to the center
| SNUBS, AND A TYMPANI RESONATOR, IN COLLIDING GALAXIES NGC 3314
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Called 'the wranglers' because it looks like two octopuses wrangling
There
are many
short snubs, plus
a giant tympani resonator,
in this Hubble view of galaxies
NGC 3314,
interpreted by astronomers to
be two galaxies co-incidentally superimposed due
to high red shift content in one compared to the other.
However irrespective of the problems the complications of two
distinct separate red shifts in one object might add to the
weight of cosmic theories such as the big bang, the
fact of 'snubs' plus a giant tympani resonator,
are telltale clues of momentums in streams
and inertial rivers flowing in rapid
different directions as galaxy
masses from two dissimilar
energy sources merge
and begin to try
to sort each
other out
The
next two views
(enhanced by Greydon Moore)
puts new meaning to the word 'wrangling',
a giant thick dull arm from the upper vertical
component galaxy wraps around under the shelf of
the horizontal component galaxy, sort of brings
straight to mind images of a giant squid
wrapped around a sperm whale. In view
of such combat it is hard to
imagine how these two
galaxies are not
'wrangling'
In
fact, the
whole subculture
below the flattop's shelf,
extends into outer field both
along and down below the plane of
horizon of the flattop, the extended
reaches of matter are dull and diffused
but there is plenty of it the only
thing hiding it from plain
view is it is not hot
My
best
uneducated
guess is the spiral
is slicing through the flattop,
the spiral bursting through from below
and canted at an oblique angle the muddy
wide bands of matter over the upper
rear backside of the tablttop
what is left of the spiral's
farthest away arms, see
next for why the
image cannot
be used
to try and
reconstruct what
has happened with the two centers
Giant tympani resonator
The 'snub'
in question is not
a snub, actually, a sawed
off stump of an arm sticking out,
which, if this Hubble image is correct, can
only be the result of recent even current collision
PATCHWORK QUILT ERROR
The
tympani
may not be genuine,
it lies within a narrow band
where a system error in image patching
has produced two horizontal strips in which the
contents on the inside of the strip borders is
clearly not in density synch with the
contents on the outside of the
strips, result is a
very misleading
representation
of circumstances here,
in fact if you take the trouble
to view all of the yellow central zones in
high magnification (zooms) and high enhancements
you will see that many of the small central region
details in this image are bogus, due to image
flaws. It seems that instead of one
whole picture, two entirely
separate images have
been quilted
together
patchwork,
to produce the
version publically released
Called 'the hamburger' because it looks like one
Thought
to be the result
of a collision between a
large elliptical galaxy (round with
no arms) and a small spiral galaxy, the odd
Centaurus A
galaxy may be providing proof of a
collision. In the next enhanced views,
a round vertical collar wrapping a
horizontal extend left of
center may be a snub
in more rudimental
form, the snub
perhaps just
forming
In
fact, many
tiny snubs can be
seen all over the place in
the exposed seething center region
I have
to be honest
with you - an idea
so brilliently clear when the
Centaurus images where staged and the
above caption written, today, what? Can't make
sense, what are the snubs being hailed. Oh well, duty
served, the above Centaurus images are an excellent intro for
this
| THE GIANT SUNFLOWER GALAXY IS JUST BEGINNING - WHAT HUMANS SEE
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Look
at how
enormous it
is, even with a vast
telescope like the Subaru hardly
a glimpse of the loom in space is achieved
until the image is enhanced with guts and fortitude
to reveal a whole major underplay in the disk which reaches
far further out, and sinks into a deep well, in space, the
new view making the small view seem like the small
centerwhorl of a large cinnoman cookie in
comparison, not to mention 'stingers'
How
much of
this 'enormity'
called the 'Sunflower'
galaxy has been cropped in the
seeming mighty frame. The only way we can
know is for astronomers to take another
picture in a much large frame
Attempts
to profile the
'stinger' in M63 - not easy
Notice
how far down in
the bowl of a colosseum
occurs the center coils, the rush of
seething energy motored (in theory) by a
mighty black hole. The fact of the deep
sink into a gravity well
is found in
most galaxies whose tops are
exposed to outer space.
See examples here
of other galaxies
which have deep
centers open to
the bare naked sky
The
giant
dubbed the
Sunflower Galaxy
by astronomers, as photographed
by the Subaru telescope operated out of Japan,
has TWO very odd 'stingers' in its outer right reaches, the
'stingers' when enhanced by Mister Moore turning out
to be at vertical oblique angles to the main
plane lay of the galaxy's expanded canopy
TYMPANI IN M101
In fact
here is another
tympani resonator, you
can hardly see it in the original
or even in a first level zoom, but zooming
right in on it reveals a classic motor formation
(it looks just like a general electric motor) with
fins forming a hexagonal cowling (6 sides) around
an abruptly emerging thim arm, percussive
compressions and rivers of inertia
seeking their own paths of
least resistence the
suggested cause
of such a
tympani
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A CLUSTER OF OLD SNUBS IN BODES GALAXY M81
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At least
five snubs can
be seen moulded and
smoothed with age, in folded
ellipses forming 'V' breaches in arm flows
in the upper left rim. Because Bodes is seen oriented
at an oblique angle in our Earth view it seems the snubs
are at a narrowed end, but if seen full on chances are
Bodes will be more full circle (disk) and the
cluster of worn snubs merely somewhere
along the limb of the outer rim
1
2
5
Pull back zoom shows more of the large disturbed area containing
multiple 'snubs'.
3
4
Although
seeming overhazed
and blurry, when the two
blue images above are focused
together as a composite, positive
factors re-enforce, negative factors
cancel, and the image leaps to life
with clear outstanding details
NGC 2997
A very
large blunt
with tiny tubes has
been partically captured in
this VLT electronic telescope view
by ESO, the blunt is the large upright
circular which dominates the right end of
the core, a figure which is at right
angles upright to the plane
of the core
That
very large
very bright object in
the upper right edge of this image,
is it a super large super hot nearby star or
is it an artifact upon the face of Ngc 2997, I have
not been able to sleuth this out one way or the other
The
fact that
the major kink in
the arm is major, an elbow
jog seen from above, plus the fact that
not one but at least two (the snub and another
smaller blunt above it on the right) are both prime
clues that this galaxy has been powerfully impacted
by an intruder which cleaved away some of the
Ngc 2997 matter exposing huge depth, and
snapped an arm dragging it to behind
causing the jog with a rattle
at the end, amongst
other things
This
same image
has contributed to
s-shapes, and
intruders
End
of chapter
exam. How many collision
caused blunts can you count on the
right side of this galaxy. A. There is a
platen.
B. There is a dobbler. C. There is a smoothed
shank of upright arm looking like a
question mark. All A, B, C
What
better than
the scan of a sliced
cucumber to illustrate the
basic shape of large snubs
caused by collisions
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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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