Slashdot Mirror


Interferometer Spots Galaxy at 40M Lightyears

techno-vampire writes "JPL announces that a pair of telescopes used as an optical interferometer have detected a galaxy 40 million light years away, smashing the previous record of 3,000 light years. This feat, using infrared, has given us a far more detailed look into the center of a galaxy, and opened up a whole new field of research."

60 comments

  1. Hubble Deep Field Images? by orkysoft · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What about the Hubble Deep Field images that showed galaxies as much as 13 billion light years away?

    --

    I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    1. Re:Hubble Deep Field Images? by orkysoft · · Score: 5, Informative
      NGC 4151 is 40 million light years from Earth, far beyond the most distant object previously detected by this type of telescope system, which was about 3,000 light years from Earth.

      Ah, that explains.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    2. Re:Hubble Deep Field Images? by lookingup · · Score: 5, Informative

      The important point here is that they were able to use the two Keck "big guns" together to simulate the resolution of a much bigger telescope. Until recently, only bright stars were bright enough to make these sort of observations. The Keck and ESO interferometers are light-years ahead both because of their large mirrors and because they're using advanced image correction via small, flexible mirrors to correct for the distortion caused by our atmosphere. This makes the light train much more coherent and makes it much easier to get good interference patterns. Therefore they can observe much fainter objects.

    3. Re:Hubble Deep Field Images? by inertia187 · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's the deepest detection by interferometer. It's just a spot, though. Hubble's Deep Field images are more fun to look at. And with multiple passes, it's even pretty. These three have a lot to say about this subject.

      --
      A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
  2. Read article, interferometer != telescope by Caractacus+Potts · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wish I could tell you the difference between the two, but I'm just now looking it up myself. Obviously, we've "detected" objects much, much, much further away. Even more importantly, we even have "Artist's Depictions" of those too!

    1. Re:Read article, interferometer != telescope by hubie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Keep in mind that a telescope really is an interferometer. It forms an image by combining light from all parts of the primary mirror in phase at the detector. A (two-beam) interferometer combines light from two beams in phase at the detector. You can easily convert a telescope from it's "normal" mode over to an interferometer by putting a mask with two holes on it. This is how Michelson made the first stellar diameter measurements, and the Kecks, operating in interferometer mode, are just using the same technique Michelson did, just on a much much larger scale.

  3. 40 million light years? by NanoGator · · Score: 1

    I wonder if that's far enough to find the people who find overlords jokes funny.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
    1. Re:40 million light years? by orkysoft · · Score: 2, Funny

      The galaxy in question is supposedly called the "Beowulf Cluster" ;-)

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    2. Re:40 million light years? by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "The galaxy in question is supposedly called the "Beowulf Cluster" ;-)"

      heh!

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    3. Re:40 million light years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was this a joke?

  4. The Devil's in the DETAILS by Makoss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To hopefully help quell the rush of prople who don't RTFA. Because the post is a bit. . .misleading.

    "NGC 4151 is 40 million light years from Earth, far beyond the most distant object previously detected by this type of telescope system, which was about 3,000 light years from Earth."

    "this type of telescope system"

    They are refering SPECIFICALLY to the technique used to image this. NOT 'most distant object imaged'.

    --
    Building a better backup.
    Zettabyte Storage
    1. Re:The Devil's in the DETAILS by dnahelix · · Score: 1

      yes, techno vampire wrote a somewhat partial, if not misleading synopsis.

      --
      Slashdot Eds Link Anonymous Posts With Logged Posts
      They Are Vermin Feeding On Each Other's Feces.
      I Hate \.
  5. how fast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can we get there using a transwarp conduit?

    1. Re:how fast by Kethinov · · Score: 1
      can we get there using a transwarp conduit?
      You can get there with a standard warp drive, or even impulse for that matter. It would just take a very long time. In fact, using transwarp could take a long time too. Consider the mechanics of transwarp.

      Transwarp conduits seem to vary in speed greatly. In TNG episode "Decsent" the Enterprise entered a pre-layed Borg transwarp conduit and covered 65 lightyears in about nine seconds, a speed of around 200,000,000 c, or 8.125 lightyears per second(!). At that speed transwarp could take you across our galaxy in roughly 6 hours! But to cross 400,000,000 lightyears, it would take roughly 1 and a half years. Gives you an idea on how much empty space there is between galaxies, huh?

      That said, we're talking about a pre-layed conduit. Star Trek established during Voyager that transwarp conduits must be layed by a vessel before they can be traveled at 200,000,000 c. The process of traveling at transwarp and laying a new conduit in your wake is much slower than traveling across a premade one. Creating a new conduit also varies in speed greatly. At it's slowest in Star Trek history, we've seen it go at roughly 100,000 c, or 13.7 light years per hour. At it's fastest in Star Trek history, we've seen it go at roughly 1,500,000 c, or 2.3148^ light years per minute. By taking the mean of these two extremes, it's reasonable to assume that the average speed of transwarp speed non prelayed conduit is 800,000 c, or 3.6 light years per minute.

      So, to answer your question, since no one has yet layed a transwarp conduit to the galaxy in question (or maybe we just can't find it?), it would take 211.3 years of transwarp at 3.6 light years per second (the average) to travel the 400,000,000 light years to get there.

      Considering the fact that we're talking about 24th century hypothetical technology and even that won't get you there very quickly, don't plan on taking your next vacation there.

      (Disclaimer: Keep in mind that these calculations are heavily rounded and generalized and I threw them all together relatively quickly.)
      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    2. Re:how fast by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      God damn it. I knew something was off with that distance. It's 40,000,000 light years not 400,000,000.

      So with a prelayed conduit that'd be just under 2 months and making a new conduit it would be 21.1 years of transwarp. Sorry about that. Well I guess if we ever invent the technology it isn't so unrealistic after all, is it?

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    3. Re:how fast by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 1

      Transwarp conduits seem to vary in speed greatly.

      Depending on what is called for in the script :-P

      --
      There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
    4. Re:how fast by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you sit down and look at every episode of the various different series that involve transwarp, you begin to see a pattern of which I described in my initial reply. If you discredit the utter ridiculously scientific nonsense in "Voyager: Threshold" regarding transwarp theory, it all falls into place. (Besides, Tom Paris in a later episode tells Seven of Nine that he'd never flown at Transwarp which seems to decannonize "Threshold" in the first place.)

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    5. Re:how fast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give me your address and I'll send you some real porn ^^

  6. so... by austad · · Score: 1

    From things I've read, everything in the universe seems to be moving away from something and expanding. So, where is the "center", what's in it?

    --
    Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
    1. Re:so... by Makoss · · Score: 1

      Not quite so simple.

      A more accurate representation is that space is expanding, thus every point it getting further from every other. So wherever you are everything seems to be moving away from you. . .

      I'd give more detail, but it's 8pm, on a friday night, and I'm still at work. It's time to be gone.

      --
      Building a better backup.
      Zettabyte Storage
    2. Re:so... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Everything in the universe is moving away from everything else. A "two-dimensional" model should help you get this.

      Imagine a balloon. Now, imagine dots on the outer surface of the balloon that represent galaxies and other matter. These objects exist on the two-dimensional plane that is the outer surface. It is curved slightly in three dimensions, but from the point of view of the dots, they don't notice this (they can't percieve this third dimension).

      Now, imagine if I blew the balloon up. The dots move away from each other and space expands between the dots. The balloon universe is expanding, but where is the center? There is no center.

      This holds true for our own universe. The universe is expanding in more than three dimensions. Basically, the space between the stars and galaxies is expanding. Therefore, there is no "center" of the universe.

    3. Re:so... by PD · · Score: 1

      The balloon is a bad example. Use the raisin bread instead.

      When you bake a raisin bread and it rises, all the raisins get farther apart from each other. Each raisin sees all the other raisins receeding from it.

    4. Re:so... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      When you bake a raisin bread and it rises, all the raisins get farther apart from each other. Each raisin sees all the other raisins receeding from it.

      Yes, but a loaf of bread has a definite center. The surface of a balloon doesn't. Ignoring discontinuity at the neck of the balloon, every spot on the balloon's surface has equal claim to be the center, which makes it a better analogy in this case.

      In the real Universe of course, I'm the center. :-)

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    5. Re:so... by PD · · Score: 1

      My raisin breads are infinite. Just keep doubling the recipe.

    6. Re:so... by ekuns · · Score: 1

      From things I've read, everything in the universe seems to be moving away from something and expanding. So, where is the "center", what's in it?

      There is no center. Space is either infinite (open universe) or finite (closed universe). If space is infinite, then there is no center because there is no boundary. On the other hand, if space is finite, then the curvature of space means that the universe eventually closes back on itself at some unimaginably distant distance.

      In one case it's like asking "What's the center of an infinite 2-d plane?" I'll ignore jokes answering, "Well, the point 0,0 of course"! :) In the other case, it's like asking, "What's the center of the surface of the Earth?"

      Space itself is expanding, like the common example of a cooking loaf of raisin bread. The difference is that a loaf of bread is expanding into an already-existing space. But the universe is simply expanding. This means that space itself is expanding which is one reason that things are getting farther and farther apart.

      Curved geometries of 3d space are not intuitive because people can only perceive 3 dimensions. So we cannot easily imagine in what a 3d space can bend in. That's why people always fall back to 2d examples. If a sphere is expanding, to a 2d being embedded in the surface of the sphere, all it can tell is that space itself is getting larger. In its universe, there is no center of the expansion.

    7. Re:so... by BoogieChile · · Score: 1

      There's one thing that I've always wondered about - Does that mean that we are expanding along with it?

      Is the earth further away from the sun than it used to be? So the dot on the ballon that represents the Earth and the dot for the sun are further apart?

    8. Re:so... by eggoeater · · Score: 1

      IANA celestial physicist but from what I understand, the definition of open and closed universe is not refering to a boundry, or infinite space. From what I've read, there is a finite amount of "space" (not to mention matter) regardless of open or closed.
      Here's my breakdown:
      The universe was born around 15 billion years ago and it's been expanding ever since. Whether it continues to expand depends on the amount of matter in the universe. If there is not enough matter (i.e. not enough gravity), the universe will continue expanding at an accelerated rate. This is an open universe.
      If there is a LOT of matter, the universe will stop expanding and start to contract with predictable results. This is a closed universe.
      The third option, you didn't mention, is where scientists think we are now....a 'flat' universe. This refers to a very narrow spot on the graph between open and closed in which the universe will ALWAYS expand, but at a decelerated rate; the expansion never stops but gets slower. The fact that our universe conveniently has just the right amount of matter to fall in this range has brought up a lot of discussion about God, etc. etc.
      So to get back to the point of the thread, in my opinion, there could be a center of the universe, but I don't think it has to do with the universe being open, closed, or flat. It has more to do with who's creating the map. :)
      -Steve

    9. Re:so... by ekuns · · Score: 1

      the definition of open and closed universe is not refering to a boundry, or infinite space. [snip] If there is not enough matter (i.e. not enough gravity), the universe will continue expanding at an accelerated rate [snip] The third option, you didn't mention, is where scientists think we are now....a 'flat' universe.

      OK, I was speaking imprecisely. You're partly correct. A closed universe is often used to mean a universe that will eventually collapse upon itself.

      In all cases, there is (at any moment in time) a finite amount of space. The difference is that in the closed universe you speak of, space will reach a maximum "volume" and will then contract. In the other two cases (flat and open), there is no maximum volume. Space is finite at any moment in time, but the "maximum" is infinite because expansion occurs forever. The difference between "flat" and "open" is that one case is asymptotically flat and in "infinite time" would "stop" expanding, and the other case expands forever. Not accelerating, but not decelerating enough to stop even in infinite time.

      The accelerating expansion is a totally different issue -- dark energy. Dark energy (as proposed) can have a negative gravitational influence, thus causing things to move farther apart with increasing velocity. Without dark energy, an open universe would expand forever, but at a decelerating rate.

      A "flat" universe is not a very narrow spot on the graph between open and closed. It is a single zero-dimensional point where the mass of the universe exactly balances the expansion. This universe will still expand forever, however.

      The whole definition of space expanding does not allow for a "center" of the expansion. For there to be a center, space would have to be expanding into something. That is not the case. Space is simply getting bigger.

      By the way, the word "flat" is used to describe the geometry of space. A flat universe is one that is flat geometrically in 3 dimensions in the same way that a flat infinite plane is flat. The other two options are both curved. The "not enough matter" choice is curved hyperbolically, like a horse saddle shape. The other choice is curved in a way that can close in on itself.

      Again, using examples of 2-d surfaces embedded in a 3-dimensional space.

  7. bull by Tuxinatorium · · Score: 0, Troll

    the previous record was definitely not 3,000 light years. There are very few galaxies that close, even. Backyard telescopes can see ones farther away than that.

    1. Re:bull by bob301 · · Score: 1
      There are very few galaxies that close, even.

      For a long time, the Large Magellanic Cloud, an irregular type satellite galaxy of our own, was held to be the closest galaxy to the Milky Way. It is 179,000 light-years away. But in 1994 the Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy was discovered at 80,000 light-years. It now holds the honor.

      -Quote thanks to NASA
      The closest galaxy is over25 times farther away than 3,000 light years.
  8. Just wait for another 10 years by Radical+Rad · · Score: 5, Interesting
    When the MAXIM flys in about another decade, it will be able to resolve images (in Xray) up to a million times better than anything now available. It will allow imaging of blackholes, that is actual visualization of the Shwarzchild radius as well as observing other stars as well as we can our own sun today. To do this the telescopes must be in orbit since the high frequency radiation scatters too easily in the atmosphere. Even at the infrared wavelengths that the Keck used, adaptive optics were needed to make their observations from the ground.

    I would like to see an array of cheap telescopes stationed at the LaGrangian points to do interferometry at any wavelength. Gravity wave detection could also be included in the mix. There would be no need for elaborate vibration damping and not being limited to the simple L shape that current ground based gravity detectors use, we would be able to triangulate gravity wave disturbances in 3 dimensions!

    ...I sense a change in the force...

    1. Re: Just wait for another 10 years by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      ...and we'll be able to see stuff 40,000,010 lightyears away.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:Just wait for another 10 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The site says 25-50 years, and explains why. Do you know something NASA doesn't?

    3. Re:Just wait for another 10 years by hubie · · Score: 1

      It is probably a reference to the Pathfinder Mission, which is a demo or proof-of-concept mission.

    4. Re:Just wait for another 10 years by StCredZero · · Score: 1

      It will allow imaging of blackholes, that is actual visualization of the Shwarzchild radius

      Actually, the chances that we can have "actual visualization of the Schwartzchild radius" is quite small, since most black holes will have quite high rotation and strong magnetic fields. Schwartzchild black holes are not likely to be formed in nature. We will probably get to image black holes described by Kerr's equations. (Rapidly Rotating) If these have an event horizon, it is likely an oblate ellipsoid.

  9. ?!? That ain't right. by voisine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Our own milky way is about 100,000 light years across, so
    that 3,000 light year number is at least a few orders of
    magnitude off. WTF?

    1. Re:?!? That ain't right. by E1v!$ · · Score: 1

      Probably some sort of Einsteiniean relativity whatchamagig.

      Or maybe we're just hosting some really small gallaxies inside our own....

      Or maybe it's a case for a fractal universe...

      or maybe I just need to go to bed (1am here)

  10. Why such a large difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't the change from 3,000 light years to 40,000,000 light years raise anyones eyebrows? That's a pretty big gap to jump.

  11. Even more confusing... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...space was supposedly full before it started expanding. It has been cooling, in theory, because of the expansion of space itself rather than the expansion of matter within space.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  12. This does not hold true for this universe by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    The balloon universe is expanding, but where is the center? There is no center.

    Not far from us, it turns out. The galaxies in our universe are arranged, loosely, in concentric shells. The center about which these shells are con happens to be not far outside our own galaxy.

    Lots of scientists pooh-pooh the idea, not because they've examined the data but because they're allergic to the philosophical implications of this. A few others have made genuine attempts to examine and refute the data, so far without success. We need more scientists to find new approaches to falsification, because unless this can be falsified it revolutionises our entire approach to cosmology (and clears out dozens of now-failed cosmological theories at a stroke).

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:This does not hold true for this universe by Xolotl · · Score: 1

      And the evidence for this is ....?

    2. Re:This does not hold true for this universe by barakn · · Score: 1

      offhand i'd say we've been Trolled. Maps of galaxies, generally thin wedges, show them to be arranged as filaments or sheets around the edges of voids, for example this and a higher res version. The galaxies are not arranged as concentric shells but as the matrix of an open-celled foam. Any appearance of concentricity is due to the fact that galaxies further away are harder to see (see the bottom image).

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
  13. It's a typo: 3 million to 40 million by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It couldn't be 3,000 lightyears after all since there are no galaxies at that distance, as it would still be within our own galaxy which is roughly 100,000 lighyears across.

  14. Feeding time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Do you know what focusing only on "solvable" problems leads to? Stagnation, boredom, and apathy. We (humanity) might not be here for all that long, and it's important to answer the important questions (how and why) so that we can keep that sense of something greater alive, lest we get bogged down in the mundane workings of everyday life. Furthmore, most people are starting to realize that it's actually easier to figure out the physics of the universe (which are ruled by concrete laws, even if we don't know them yet) than to solve the irrational and largely insignificant problems of our own planet.

    Face it: there is absolutely nothing we can do to piss nature off. One tiny-ass planet in an insignificant solar system, in a small galaxy which is part of an utterly trivial galactic cluster can have absolutely no effect on the big picture. Some would argue that that is exactly why we should pay attention to human problems, but I disagree. I think that there is a real danger of cultural stagnation if we focus to hard on "our" problems. We can fling our tribulations and plaints into the very face of the universe, and she doesn't care. Scratch that, she doesn't even notice. So understanding of her greater workings is absolutely essential if we want her to sit up, take notice and perhaps, one day, answer to us.

    The old masters had it right: observation is the key. Strive to hard, and you cannot maintain the pace. Overexert yourself, and breathing becomes difficult; racing and hunting madden the mind, and precious things lead one astray. Therefore, remain still and observe. Only by being part of the ebb and flow of the universe can you avoid strife. If you have no expectations, then nothing is unexpected-- you can be ready for anything. Similarly, if you accomplish nothing, then nothing is left undone.

    Also, don't bother with YHBT business. I needed to vent, so I did.

  15. Re:It's a typo: 3 million to 40 million by hubie · · Score: 1
    The Milky Way is up to 100,000 ly across, but it is only about 2,000 ly thick at the arms, and 10,000 ly thick at the bulge.

    The closest galaxy is (quote taken from here):

    For a long time, the Large Magellanic Cloud, an irregular type satellite galaxy of our own, was held to be the closest galaxy to the Milky Way. It is 179,000 light-years away. But in 1994 the Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy was discovered at 80,000 light-years. It now holds the honor.
  16. Re:It's a typo: 3 million to 40 million by hubie · · Score: 1

    Oops. If I had paid attention I would have noticed that I was scooped by 12 hours here.

  17. Links to concentric galaxy stuff by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    A chap named Halton Arp started making a collection a peculiar galaxies which seemed to be (and still are) doing bizarre things to our notions about redshift, eventually building his collection to 338 entities (if you follow the links on that page you can see images of every one of them).

    One of the things he noticed was that galaxies happen in statistically significant concentric shells, at least according to the redshifts. One of the less heated discussions I've seen of the consequences is at the University of Alabama's Astronomy department. Bill Keel, the astronomer here commenting, finishes "The evidence in favor of the standard picture is hardly compelling [...]. It survives mostly because nothing better has shown up;". Bill is the bloke who (which Ray White) brought us the silhouetted galaxy shot from Hubble, and has a huge collection of astronomically interesting stuff on his site.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Links to concentric galaxy stuff by barakn · · Score: 1

      I was hoping for "links to concentric galaxy stuff." Instead it is a discussion of non-cosmological redshift, which is a related topic but not quite what I was hoping for. According to hubblesite.org, "Only a few astronomers still think there is reasonable evidence for noncosmological redshifts," and "An overwhelming abundance of evidence long ago convinced virtually all astronomers that quasars are indeed at the vast distances indicated by their redshifts." Much of this shift in view comes from Hubble's own higher resolution photos.

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
  18. NERD POWER by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    IIRC, transwarp doesn't actually make your trip any faster with respect to how the traveler perceives it. Instead it somehow dilates (or contracts, I forget which) time so that on the outside it seems like you took a lot less time than you did inside the ship.

    So you think you were traveling for 2 weeks, but everyone else thinks your trip took 1 week. Something like that.

    I always thought that explanation was lame, personally, and it did come from "Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise," which really is tremendously inconsistent with the rest of the ST Universe. So who knows.

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:NERD POWER by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      Transwarp theory, like many things in TOS, have been heavily contradicted by future series. Many Star Trek fans consider many parts of TOS to be totally decannonized (even by Gene Roddenberry himself), just like Voyager's Threshold episode. Unfortunately, B&B aren't getting any better at this. Star Trek Enterprise is continuing to kick continuity like a helpless puppy to the point where we're going to start feeling sorry for it.

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    2. Re:NERD POWER by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

      Remind me of what happened in Threshold?

      --

      +++ATH0
    3. Re:NERD POWER by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      Well, the Voyager crew invents "transwarp" technology in one day; something that millions of Federation scientists have been trying to accomplish for a century. Furthermore, it isnt transwarp. They just call it that. It is in fact "warp 10", or "infinite speed". But there's no such thing as infinite speed. Maybe it can exist in a mathematical equation as something hypothetical, but it cannot exist in reality.

      If that's not enough scientific nonsense for you, guess what? We're evolving into salamanders. Paris evolves into a salamander-like thing which crawls on the floor. Aside from the fact that this is obviously an inferior species, evolution is a process that takes place over many generations and it is a process that strongly depends on environmental conditions. Evolution doesnt happen for no reason and definitely cannot happen within a single lifetime. Infinite speed or not.

      To top it all off, the doctor comes up with a miraculous way to revert Mr. Paris back to his original human self. He essentially de-evolves him. That would be like finding a way to revert yourself into a primate. Disgusted yet? Most people consider this episode comedy, not science fiction.

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
  19. Unfortunately, redshift is hard to imply... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...from RGB photos instead of spectral lines on a plate.

    Like I said, many scientists object to it from their armchairs (and others too, QED) more because they're uncomfortable with where it might take them than by experimenting themselves or because they've found positive contradictions. Vague handwaving appeals to authority like the HubbleSite wording are almost a hallmark of this approach.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Unfortunately, redshift is hard to imply... by barakn · · Score: 1
      "from RGB photos instead of spectral lines on a plate."

      Yeah, exactly, so why did you supply the link to the photos of the Arp collection of peculiar galaxies? You originally were arguing about concentric shells of galaxies. That's what I'm curious about, and because you are too reticent to post an appropriate link, I still know nothing about this theory.

      And the hubblesite quotes were taken from a page quite relevant to the Arp galaxies. The famous Markarian 205 photos showing a purported link between a high-z Seyfert nucleus and a low-z galaxy are discussed, including the fact that near-UV light from the Seyfert is absorbed by the galaxy, indicating that the Seyfert is behind, not to the side. This argument is particularly convincing as it does not rely on redshift.

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
  20. I supplied the link to the *discussion* by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of spectra elsewhere - and perhaps more usefully, plenty of tabulations and analyses of said spectra.

    Also, there is nothing to stop Markarian 205's quasar from being behind the "host" galaxy relative to us, since we are working in 3D here. The unsolved question is how far behind it is. It doesn't make much weight in the argument either way, but if you could show that every case was such an overlay and that there were few cases of near-UV absorption for visually isolated quasars you'd have a case.

    Another potential explanation for low near-UV, one pulled out of the ether as I type rather than dreamed up by a competent astrophysicist might be that quasars throw off UV in bands shaped roughly like Jupiter's clouds, and Markarian 205 happens to not have a band aimed at us.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:I supplied the link to the *discussion* by barakn · · Score: 1
      Also, there is nothing to stop Markarian 205's quasar from being behind the "host" galaxy relative to us, since we are working in 3D here."

      No. NGC 4319 has been disrupted by gravitational forces from something massive, as evidenced by the wide flung arms and the dust lanes. These are roughly perpendicular to our line of sight, meaning the galaxy and the massive object are also in a plane perpendicular to our line of sight. Many members of your wacky little group thinks it's the Seyfert, Markarian 205, that is the disrupting massive object, because they think they see a bridge between the two. Any proof that the Seyfert is not in the plane is proof against this theory.

      Another potential explanation for low near-UV, one pulled out of the ether as I type rather than dreamed up by a competent astrophysicist might be that quasars throw off UV in bands shaped roughly like Jupiter's clouds, and Markarian 205 happens to not have a band aimed at us.

      Your ad hoc theory has no plausible mechanism, and it doesn't address the evidence. Markarian 205 is shining near-UV at us. If one were to measure the near-UV at equal distances from the center of Markarian 205, one would expect the same amount of near-UV from all points, as Markarian 205 is very spherically symmetrical. Instead, less near-UV is noted from the side closer to NGC 4319 than the side opposite.

      Since you didn't actually supply links to the concentric galaxy shell theory, I will do so. Here's one from the Institute of Creation Research. Here's another from the highly respected Science Frontiers. One study was done only on galaxies in our local supercluster. Since these galaxies are gravitationally bound, it is not surprising that small packs of them might be traveling at the same speeds. Other studies were pencil-beam surveys. Since they did not cover the whole sky, or even a significant fraction of it, claiming that quantized redshifts from them are proof of shells of galaxies is bad science. A more realistic interpretation is that each pencil-beam saw the walls of bubbles, much like the wedge surveys show. Evidence of large-scale structure, yes. Proof of a geocentric universe, no.

      The concentric shell theory relies on redshifts providing proper distances (quantized redshifts imply quantized distances). You provided links to pages that claim evidence that redshifts don't provide proper distances. To claim that you provided links to the concentric shell discussion is completely dishonest, as these groups are in opposing camps.

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
  21. My goodness, aren't we feeling pompous today? (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    No. NGC 4319 has been disrupted by gravitational forces from something massive, as evidenced by the wide flung arms and the dust lanes.

    Yes, and what does it look like from the side? You've got to admit than an exactly-planar strike is extremely unlikely - unless Arp's theories on the issue are in essence correct (obviously not a palatable outcome for you).

    Any proof that the Seyfert is not in the plane is proof against this theory.

    Why? A few thousand or tens of thousands of light-years may not make much difference either way. Yet you seem to be assuming that any difference at all is going to be vast. Having Markarian half-buried in the galaxy would be fine from Arp's PoV.

    Your ad hoc theory has no plausible mechanism

    Big surprise there. Consider carefully the term "ad hoc".

    less near-UV is noted from the side closer to NGC 4319 than the side opposite.

    You've still only raised one possible explanation for why that should be so, but what if (to materialise another ad hoc proposal) Markarian's hyperindigo is being spread more by NGC 4319, the closer it passes by? That would be observed as lower intensity too. And who knows what material flows near large gravity-linked objects would be like? I'm sure there's other possibilities.

    To claim that you provided links to the concentric shell discussion is completely dishonest, as these groups are in opposing camps.

    I didn't claim that you provided links to either side. I provided a link to a site discussing the state of affairs in a reasonably even-handed manner, and said so.

    But no, that wasn't good enough for barakn! Having decided that I'm a member of set "wacky little group", you've got it fixed in your mind that I must, by definition, have done something wrong, haven't you? Or are you going to be "completely dishonest" about that? Nothing like a good dose of ad hom to screw up a debate you feel insecure about, is there? (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  22. truce by barakn · · Score: 1
    Our discussion started with name calling and has gotten worse. I'd prefer to see if we can agree on who believes what and why. The issue is very complicated, so I'm attempting to separate put the numerous theories into a small number of camps.

    Camp 1: Support the work of William Tifft in '70s, and subsequent work of Napier and Guthrie in '97 showing quantized redshifts, used as proof of geocentric or galactocentric universe, with concentric shells of galaxies around us or our galaxy. Tifft's early work utilized results of pencil-beam surveys, largely discredited because a foamy universe produces the same results. Napier and Guthrie find quantization in larger sample of galaxies in the Virgo cluster, statistically significant only when assuming the local cluster is falling towards Virgo. Many members of this camp are Christians who think that Earth is special because of Divine Interest in the human race.

    Camp 2: Arp and friends. They think that redshift has two components, one associated with velocity and one an intrinsic (inherent) property of the object that increases with time. While they deny the geocentric shell model and the quantization of "total" redshift, they do think the intrinsic redshifts are quantized. Start with galaxies in the middle of a pair of quasars. One must assume the quasars have the same intrinsic redshift (and that they had a common origin in the 'parent' galaxy), and then the intrinsic redshift of both can be found by an average of the total redshifts of the two quasars. Quantization of the intrinsic redshift is implied to mean that something about the quasars changes as they age- in discrete steps. This is where they decide to throw out much of modern physics on its ear. They conclude that quasars are new matter being born in an infinitely-old, flat universe (somehow being spit out of the hearts of more mature galaxies). New matter starts out with zero mass and gains mass as it ages, either as the square of the elapsed time or in discrete quantum steps, depending on which website one reads. ref.

    Camp 3. 'Mainstream' scientists - Think that redshift is due to the peculiar velocity of the emitting object and the stretching of the space through which the photons must travel on their way here. Quasars are very far away, not near foreground galaxies. Problems: 90% of the expected matter is invisible. A 'dark energy' is necessary to explain the perceived expansion. ref

    So I got confused when you started the thread by saying something that sounded like you were in camp 1, but then posting links to camp 2. Some mainstream astronomers think there may be something interesting lurking in reports of quantization., so don't knock us for asking about it. Even worse would be if we ignored it entirely.

    --
    "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
  23. Good finish. by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    I'm happy here in the peanut gallery, noting that several cosmologists are grossy upset at the existing theories (I note the recent appearance of another new "white-hole cosmology", for example) and waiting to see how the dust will settle.

    But meanwhile, please accept a "+1, Reasonable" moderation for your response. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing