![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Just thinking out loud. It must be hard to separate the blueshifted,and
the redshifted photons in our line of sight,and we must not leave out the bright galaxy bulge that can be considered not spinning at all. Still its best to keep in mind galaxies with all their billions of stars give us a mass to light relation,and that tells us lots of mass is not observed.(dark matter) Than here are some thoughts on nebula and its ability to form stars.I go with a smaller denser nebula to be better than large clouds. To add to helping gravities compression force I think we have to bring in ironization into the internal vortexes. Would not come as a big surprise to me if these dense nebula clouds create lightning bolts that are a trillion times stronger than those produced in the clouds of Jupiter bert |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Just looking at a galaxy as seen from our line of sight. it is edge on.
It is beautiful. It glows from top to bottom. It has a very bright hub. It has a round dark outer edge. If the Hubble only took this one picture it would be worth every penny. You see I'm looking at the Sombrero galaxy. Its picture tell us its worth a billion words. bert |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote...
in message ... Just looking at a galaxy as seen from our line of sight. it is edge on. It is beautiful. It glows from top to bottom. It has a very bright hub. It has a round dark outer edge. If the Hubble only took this one picture it would be worth every penny. You see I'm looking at the Sombrero galaxy. Its picture tell us its worth a billion words. bert Here's M104, the Sombrero galaxy... http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap011021.html and here it is again in infrared... http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap070121.html ....and check out the link to the "magnificent tail"! happy days and... starry starry nights! -- Are you sleeping? Stars are waiting, Shining high they wait for you. Are you looking? Stars are soaring, Flashing, twinkling just for you. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5-kMXwkmPk Indelibly yours, Paine http://www.savethechildren.org/ http://www.painellsworth.net |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Painius I have a gut feeling. life is looking at a photo of the Milky
Way from Sombraro as I'm typing this and saying "What a beautiful galaxy" They might even call our galaxy "Sombrero' Why not bert PS thanks for posting those pictures I have the top one in my scrape book |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message...
... Painius I have a gut feeling. life is looking at a photo of the Milky Way from Sombraro as I'm typing this and saying "What a beautiful galaxy" They might even call our galaxy "Sombrero' Why not bert PS thanks for posting those pictures I have the top one in my scrape book Your welcome, Bert. Observers in M104, the Sombrero galaxy, probably wouldn't refer to our galaxy using their word for "Sombrero". Why?... Because the galaxy charts i have indicate that those people are positioned to see us moreso like this... http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/milkyway.html The image at the bottom of that page shows even better possibilities of the Sombreroeans perspective. They do not see the Milky Way "edge on" the way we see their galaxy. In thinking further about it, the Sombreroeans might not be able to see us at all, because our Milky Way galaxy is probably obscured by their very own "Milky Way"! happy days and... starry starry nights! -- Are you sleeping? Stars are waiting, Shining high they wait for you. Are you looking? Stars are soaring, Flashing, twinkling just for you. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5-kMXwkmPk Indelibly yours, Paine http://www.savethechildren.org/ http://www.painellsworth.net |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 24, 6:22 am, "Painius" wrote:
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message... ... Painius I have a gut feeling. life is looking at a photo of the Milky Way from Sombraro as I'm typing this and saying "What a beautiful galaxy" They might even call our galaxy "Sombrero' Why not bert PS thanks for posting those pictures I have the top one in my scrape book Your welcome, Bert. Observers in M104, the Sombrero galaxy, probably wouldn't refer to our galaxy using their word for "Sombrero". Why?... Because the galaxy charts i have indicate that those people are positioned to see us moreso like this... http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/milkyway.html The image at the bottom of that page shows even better possibilities of the Sombreroeans perspective. They do not see the Milky Way "edge on" the way we see their galaxy. In thinking further about it, the Sombreroeans might not be able to see us at all, because our Milky Way galaxy is probably obscured by their very own "Milky Way"! Plus, since that galaxy is 30 million lightyears away, they wouldn't yet be able to obverve anything human on the Earth. Double-A |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote: Commander Double-A On Jul 24, 6:22 am, "Painius" wrote: Officer Painius "G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message... Officer Bert ... Painius I have a gut feeling. life is looking at a photo of the Milky Way from Sombraro as I'm typing this and saying "What a beautiful galaxy" They might even call our galaxy "Sombrero' Why not bert PS thanks for posting those pictures I have the top one in my scrape book Officer Painius Your welcome, Bert. Observers in M104, the Sombrero galaxy, probably wouldn't refer to our galaxy using their word for "Sombrero". Why?... Because the galaxy charts i have indicate that those people are positioned to see us moreso like this... http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/milkyway.html The image at the bottom of that page shows even better possibilities of the Sombreroeans perspective. They do not see the Milky Way "edge on" the way we see their galaxy. In thinking further about it, the Sombreroeans might not be able to see us at all, because our Milky Way galaxy is probably obscured by their very own "Milky Way"! Commander Double-A Plus, since that galaxy is 30 million lightyears away, they wouldn't yet be able to obverve anything human on the Earth. Double-A nightbat Careful Commander there could be space peeper monkeys I mean alien coffeeboys on some distant planet just trying to listen in on our profound communications too. as you were, the nightbat |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Painius Flat on is just as pretty. They could call the Milky Way the
Pin Wheel Bert |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 24, 1:22 pm, nightbat wrote:
nightbat wrote Double-A wrote: Commander Double-A On Jul 24, 6:22 am, "Painius" wrote: Officer Painius "G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message... Officer Bert ... Painius I have a gut feeling. life is looking at a photo of the Milky Way from Sombraro as I'm typing this and saying "What a beautiful galaxy" They might even call our galaxy "Sombrero' Why not bert PS thanks for posting those pictures I have the top one in my scrape book Officer Painius Your welcome, Bert. Observers in M104, the Sombrero galaxy, probably wouldn't refer to our galaxy using their word for "Sombrero". Why?... Because the galaxy charts i have indicate that those people are positioned to see us moreso like this... http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/milkyway.html The image at the bottom of that page shows even better possibilities of the Sombreroeans perspective. They do not see the Milky Way "edge on" the way we see their galaxy. In thinking further about it, the Sombreroeans might not be able to see us at all, because our Milky Way galaxy is probably obscured by their very own "Milky Way"! Commander Double-A Plus, since that galaxy is 30 million lightyears away, they wouldn't yet be able to obverve anything human on the Earth. Double-A nightbat Careful Commander there could be space peeper monkeys I mean alien coffeeboys on some distant planet just trying to listen in on our profound communications too. as you were, the nightbat The "Sombrero Galaxy" sounds like the likeliest place to find them. Double-A |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote: Commander Double-A On Jul 24, 1:22 pm, nightbat wrote: nightbat wrote Double-A wrote: Commander Double-A On Jul 24, 6:22 am, "Painius" wrote: Officer Painius "G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message... Officer Bert ... Painius I have a gut feeling. life is looking at a photo of the Milky Way from Sombraro as I'm typing this and saying "What a beautiful galaxy" They might even call our galaxy "Sombrero' Why not bert PS thanks for posting those pictures I have the top one in my scrape book Officer Painius Your welcome, Bert. Observers in M104, the Sombrero galaxy, probably wouldn't refer to our galaxy using their word for "Sombrero". Why?... Because the galaxy charts i have indicate that those people are positioned to see us moreso like this... http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/milkyway.html The image at the bottom of that page shows even better possibilities of the Sombreroeans perspective. They do not see the Milky Way "edge on" the way we see their galaxy. In thinking further about it, the Sombreroeans might not be able to see us at all, because our Milky Way galaxy is probably obscured by their very own "Milky Way"! Commander Double-A Plus, since that galaxy is 30 million lightyears away, they wouldn't yet be able to obverve anything human on the Earth. Double-A nightbat Careful Commander there could be space peeper monkeys I mean alien coffeeboys on some distant planet just trying to listen in on our profound communications too. as you were, the nightbat Commander Double-A The "Sombrero Galaxy" sounds like the likeliest place to find them. Double-A nightbat You have a good point there Commander, let's ask Darla next time she posts if she is aware of the Galaxy of Sombreroians. carry on, the nightbat |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Galaxy Seen Colliding with Invisible Dark Matter Galaxy! | Double-A[_1_] | Misc | 0 | June 17th 07 12:56 PM |
* Leonardo Thoughts. | Double-A | Misc | 1 | February 1st 05 06:04 PM |
Thoughts please | Roger Hembury | UK Astronomy | 2 | January 10th 05 04:02 PM |
Spiral galaxy or Elliptical galaxy Samenness | G=EMC^2 Glazier | Misc | 13 | December 6th 03 06:07 PM |