Tympanis.htm
TETHERS WHICH HAVE STRENGTH AND COUPLE TOGETHER GALAXIES
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ARP 194 - THREE COLLIDING GALAXIES
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"Because they are colliding, there should be tympanis amongst their
sonic booms, and so there is".
"Tympanis hidden among shades. A tympani colony along the west arm is
scarely more than outlines in shadows. Above the colony is a precice
hexagon instamp".
"Two slightly different versions one then the other, show indent
hexagram (top), tympanic cluster in orange outlines along an arm edge,
spinner in the blue staircase, and a tympani shadow with oval razor
edge and rudimentary elbow arm in the lower part of the image, the
staircase (as usual) crackling with ohmwatts. Neutral charged (0)
grey spent matter (has no more entropy) drifts in hazes across
the collision".
"A staircase negative charged parity link to the third galaxy, beyond
the two wranglers".
"At the start of the staircase is a bright blue semi-transparent
cyclonnic".
"As usual, the end of the (blue) staircase tether is plugged into
the side of the other galaxy. As usual, the thin end of the (blue)
staircase tether plugs into the smaller galaxy".
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TWO GALAXIES TETHERED BY A TYMPANIC PLUG
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"Integral arms are anything which connects two galaxies together. In
the case of M51, the 'integral' arm connects to nearby interracting
small galaxy 'boris'. The connecting integral arm is being dragged
across the lower portion of M51 distorting it, showing great strength
in the arm which is strong enough to continue its shape and cause
major distortion. M51 is at the bottom of this page". Occam, in
introducing 'integral arms'.
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"The tether is not a wrap around diminishing ever thinning speeding up
strand that finally disappears into a black hole, as envisioned by Nasa
artists. This tether dives into the north east temple in a tympani plug.
The tympani plug is a sizeable indent in the galaxy".
"Close up views of the rear elliptical".
Original - illumination = 0+
"(0+ illumination means you can see something but nothing else)".
"The matter horked between the two galaxies is so thick you can walk
on it. The hork, and abundant back burner halo, make it impossible to
use their dusts to read how much dust can influence the brightness
of galaxies to the rear. I read about problems pros are having
telling cosmic distances and thought I would add to their puzzlement.
You asked me about motive in doing these images?"
"This next color cut shows more of the diffuse halo, which is spherical
but irregular with different media cavities. Slashes. Straight line
induction slashes carrying high ohm power go straight into the lower
left of the elliptical".
Finger Up speaks: "I just snapped this on the interweb, its a Hubble
image of AM1316. I Had to head butt it with adjusters now you can see an
integral arm winding around behind the sphere's right hemisphere, and
more delicacies in the sphere's halo, which is a complex structure". Upon
a nod from Occam, Finger Up fires it from the desktop to the frontwall.
"Here is another snub image done for cross eyed 3d. You can clearly
see the spiral has passed the big one, blogging through the big one's
left hemisphere and is drifting away into rearspace to the left".
"Put it up", says Occam.
"In view number 2, I enhanced it, you can see a vastly larger halo", says
Finger up. "In fact, the spiral has sliced quite close to the core".
"These of the collider galaxy are blurred by intervening dust. Resolution
is minimum grade. Low resolution is no fun. These are presented for
anyone curious about how this galaxy with it's strange appearance looks.
Watch me as I present, learn about doppler gravity arms. Don't watch if
not interested".
"There are doppler arms receeding along a conal path initating above the
core and arcing overhead, the arms expand in arc section as they
receed in a progressive lineal order. Doppler gravity arms are well
seen in collision involved M64
"This galaxy has been in prior collion(s) before now. Residual dusts
of shut down galaxy crowd the forward east portions".
"A vertical opening with swirl facing the camera at lower left of
the core, and behind it another apparatus, are galaxic sized tympani
formations".
"In AM1316 complex, in another imagizer enhancements, three short blue
doppler arms curl up in parallel receeding sequence".
ASTRONOMY ANOMALIES
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"An overlapping galaxy's snub (upright rabbit tail) ropes back into
itself as an integral arm. There is another, unseen in astronomy
releases, showing that the left galaxy is sailing rearward to the
left, glancing past the western hem of the elliptical galaxy on
the right, the integral arm is holding shape as it slices into
the elliptical galaxy like a knife cutting through soft cheese".
"In this case the two in sideglance collision are not tearing each
other apart, this dustup is more serene less schizophrenic".
"Snubs are interesting, for instance in AM1316 one of astronomy's
particular images used to try and feel how much dust in a galaxy
obscures the image of another behind. Obscuring is important in
this branch of astronomy physics in that much of universal space
distance is measured by how much brightness is seen for a distant
marker, the dimmer deemed farther away, unless it is being dusted,
changing the distance".
"The encounter is in its finishing stages. The large sphere at right is
closest. The snubbed spiral is receeding into the distance, already
passed the sphere. The integral arm continues around, and behind the
surface has cut the yellow outline, which is partially collapsed".
"What has happened is the receeding galaxy entered the collision in
forground over to the right and ploughed into the western hank of the
elliptical sphere. How you can tell is the top east end of the yellow
cut is attached to the far rear of the spiral's east edge. The spiral
is drifting slowly to the left as it receeds. Its main body has already
pulled mostly free of the elliptical".
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SILHOUETTE GALAXIES - ACCRETION STRAND AS SEEN FROM THE REAR
GALAXY'S POINT OF VIEW TETHERED TO THE SPIRAL
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Newcomer begins: "my astronomy contact at at the Blazarama Telescope
Complex experienced lensflare and got this. Friend said no good. Occam
says 'yes'. Here it is it's the one in the middle of the wallscreen".
"Notice in the foreground galaxy that the rear uparcing arm is almost
at a 90 degree polar pitch to the foreground arm from the left. This
is a well documented form of bilateral symmetry, nothing gentle is going
on here", says Occam, enlarging the pictures.
"Note: a reason why colliding galaxies can have long thin streaming arms
extending far out into deep space is that when one galaxy is approaching
another, loose material can be decoupled from a galaxy's gravity and with
less gravity drag holding it back can accelarate toward the other galaxy's
gravity, creating long thin antenna streakers". Occam explains: "one of
yous submitted this before today's class started. Beginning next week,
submit your conjectures agreeing or disagreeing. If agreeing you must
also accomodate the concepts of gravitational tide creating antennas
in galaxy collisions. Class dismissed".
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SILHOUETTE TETHERED GALAXY
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'This tether is similar to artist's renderings of a neutron star
sucking starjuice from a nearby big companion, the suck winds around
behind getting thinner as it aims toward a core pole'. Occam grins
flashing this image on the classroom front wall, what a glare from
the hot spots. Occam explains it is in an astronomy professor's teaching
lecture on see-through dust in galaxies, this was presented with great
huff with no name and screech against black just as you see. What is
missing is all of the missing mass including the tether you see next".
"My friend the Eyeball managed to get these views out of a graphic
editor using scary amounts of illumination and hue, you just barely
make out the strand winding around from the left of the foreground
galaxy, across the face of the rear galaxy and onward in a thin strand
winding around behind the rear galaxy's right flank. I would appreciate
if anyone can find a better image than Dr. Profound's best work", says
Occam, dimming the lights so the faint intergral arm (tether) can be
better seen. 'Oh, wait', says Occam pretending to be forgetful, "here's
the tether". The new student called Inspector Clueseau straightens with
a jerk.
"Other than a yoyo galaxy's shape, NGC 6745 has no distinct galaxy
symmetry features. A bright hot bluelight tether is being dragged
out by the peanut sized collider partially seen in the lower left
corner. No core poles or bilateral symmetry at the core is evident.
A thin band arcs vertically from the north east end of the core and
trails in a line diagonally to the north west following the hem of the
upper yoyo, this straight line streamer seems core pole related", says
Occam.
"Why, why, that's speculation", says IQ. "Yes", says Occam, "good enough
for me, good enough for Bobo sitting next to you". Bobo, sitting next to
IQ, smiles at being mentioned. "Notice, Nobel the Magnificent has nothing
to say", adds Occam. Bobo acquired the nickname after a goofy remark one
day, it was easier to pronounce than the lengthy foreign tongue clicking
name no one could state.
A maximum attempt to see how large Lac Labarge is
"The peanut is a lot larger than hubble assumed it to be. It has a well
developed stair case cascade leading back to the barge. The is a
cuppular hookup of the stair case tether to the side of peanut, the
coupling is to the side of a core pole not to the end".
"The entire tether is a string of tiny energy engines (tympani artifacts)
strung together at different 90 degree angled interphases, creating the
kinkness". "Kind of like internet plumbing", comments Atlargestarr.
"Was once a spiral, according to the pros. Not anymore. Clamb shell
for this portion. The overall is a yoyo galaxy with trailing thins
wrapping around the top and bottom yoyo style, with a cross bridge
arcing down across the middle where hadron parities caused tidal
movements at right angles to the original spirals".
"A tympanic coupling - the blue integral tether plugs into the vertical
side of Peanut (mostly offscreen). There is a peanut core pole there
for the hydro (+ -) polarities to connect".
"The coupling station for the other end of the hydro at the big barge,
is a horizonal tympanic interim stationary island".
"The glimpse of the peanut shows a shut down galaxy, with inertial
energies (high entropy chaos negative charges) removed, leaving low
entropy residual dusts. The coupling tether is negatively charged,
it kinks like a high tension hydro wire on the loose. It means the
coupling plug of the barge is a negative connector. Electrical current(s)
in surge betweem them? Yes".
"The images cannot tell us if the current is DC and flowing, or is
stationary as a potential power sitting stored in a capaciter. The
capacity power will tend to still hold to both poles as the galaxy
gap spreads further apart, contributing to gravity tugging continuing
connections from both galaxies as they move apart. Charge can cause
a galaxy to reverse direction and come back. Gravity will influence
the comeback as an angular momentum trajectory".
"Write this up as a rule in a new cosmic translation class textbook",
says Charge Atlargestarr. There is a kickle of laugh. Some in the
classroom write down: 'Charge - straight back. Gravity - curving back'.
"The collision is bigger than it first looks. The leading edge of
the knife (brown colored) is incised into the white core area of the
elliptical galaxy. The upright snub is embedded into dense residual
shut down dust".
"Maximum shows the blue tether streamers being drawn this way, that
peanut is moving into foreground space past the east edge of IQ's chair.
(IQ looks down). The blue tether is jogged, with escarpments in step
plateaus. The blue tether plugs into the west side of Peanut in a
tympani junction".
Hubble Heritage Original - neat and tidy - but bulk is missing
The tiny yellow core is in a warpsink deep within below the surface,
Only one thin arm arcing above to the left over the core hole is seen
which cannot be said to issue or not issue from a core pole.
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EXAMPLE OF A YOYO GALAXY - NGC 1532
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"The white tethers are being pulled forward. There is conciderable
distance between the lower tip of the tether, and the rest of the
galaxy in the background. The Barge is round".
| M64 - INTEGRAL ARM DISAPPEARS INTO A FIREWALL
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"Unseen polarity pole charged mass is behind, unseen, revealed by the
integral arm".
"Tethers zapped to seek engines. The blue tendrils and engines are
negatively charged hadrons = smooth, compact, heavy dense".
"Next - Another galaxy grapple in polished hard blue tendrils of
negative capacitance".
"Motive is simple enough. Challenge. Same challenge that motivates the
pros except I am not motivated by peer pressures turning toward me the
buddies if I did good, locking their doors the 'pals' if I backfire".
A newcomer, rather, latecomer (had been out of town when the current
cosmic classes started) is an amateur astronomy of some note for abilities
in coaxing better information out of seeming bad pixels.
"This unnamed deep space apparition is a cotter ring galaxy. The east
side of the ring starts from the side horizontally inclined, and torques
to the other side vertically inclined".
"Name unknown. Another one of those tidbits on the interweb posted with
no name, just sources who limelight the sources, and no object name".
"A tympani connects the sliver to the small yellow glow, which in turn
connects to the cotter ring".
"And, ta daa! a major hexagon tympany stamped in iron facing straight
at us inside the sliver".
"This cotter ring hoops rearward over the end of the arrow, extending
the arrow's ecliptic axis".
NGC 1738 INTEGRALLY CONNECTED - TWO INTEGRAL ARMS
THE KID'S BUNK GALAXIES
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"Part way through occupying the same space at the same time, these two
simese galaxies by Subaru are visibly connected by two thin tethers, from
the side of one (lower galaxy) going in below the underneath side wall
of the other, upper in this image. The second tether is longer going
in above the first".
"There is a tympani formation at the east end of the upstairs galaxy. A
very large tympani formation is at the lower end of the downstairs bunk.
For fact matter, there is a very large tympany at the west end of the
upstairs bunk as well".
| M51 - AN INTEGRAL ARM CAUSES A MONUMENTAL GRAVITATIONAL 'PINCH'
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A piece
of arm has been
jambed by another (an
integral arm) and is being pulled
sideways, even as the arm above begins to
slide over the pinch and the pinching arm
goes behind due to motions in counter
clockwise rotation of the diskface,
and clockwise rotation of Boris.
"That prominent shoulder forward outjut of the western arm is correct.
All M51 images show this in stereo, even two identical copies in
identical size side by side onscreen show the outjut".
"Ps, this above pair of images are a bit hard on the crossed eyes to
focus in stereo. It happens when strong foreground and strong back
a ways rearground objects need to be focused in the same dimension.
In slant angle mirror viewing, disparate stereo distances can force
eye focusing muscles to work harder that are not used to working.
In M51's case, the rear (upper) is a wayyyy back, M51 is not a
front facing disk, M51 is huge and slants at a sharp incline
rearward, rouphly 1/3 way toward being seen on edge".
"Next. First a comment":
"Short bridge connections (high frequency flows of current), connect
the gap between the two galaxies. Similar fluxes are seen above as
connecting straight line brdiges from the silhoette spiral to the
elliptical at the rear. Straight line slashes are a property when two
interacters are momentarily bridged. The slashes carry high rates of
ohm currents that vary amongst the slashes. Pullmotors and pole cores
in Boris are in communication through the slashes".
"Boris is partially shut down. The lower portion is sliced. The upper
fronds are residual low chaos dusts. Boris had spiral galaxy properties
before meeting big mother".
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