I love the fact that more research is done to learn about the extremely mysterious dark energy which may constitute about 70% of the universe. Amazing.
As for the image, it is a great tribute to science, since it is so sharp and revealing that it could be used to nail down the expansion of the universe and rule out all but the really contrived alternative theories about the solar system being inside a cosmic "void".
But I'm baffled about how the filters that went into making this image were "interpreted as color" the way they were in this image.
According to the Hubble Heritage page, the following filters were used to image NGC 5584: F336W (U), F547M (y), F657N (H-alpha + [N II]), and F814W (I). So there was one ultraviolet filter, one filter that is squarely in the green part of the spectrum, one filter that detects red emission nebulae, and one infrared filter. But how were the original images taken through these filters used to produce the image?
Suddenly a filter centered at 555nm appeared out of nowhere! It isn't mentioned among the filters used to image the galaxy. Nevertheless, a filter centered at 555 nm, which corresponds to
yellow-green light, is used to show the
blue light of the galaxy. The other two filters used is a
white one and an infrared one. What happened to the ultraviolet filter? How did the white filter appear out of nowhere? And what happened to the filter detecting red emission nebulae?
The galaxy looks good enough, but I'm still totally confused. And why not use the filter centered at the red light of emission nebulae to actually show those nebulae in the galaxy?
Maybe I'm the one who is being stupid here. If so, please enlighten me!
Ann
I love the fact that more research is done to learn about the extremely mysterious dark energy which may constitute about 70% of the universe. Amazing.
As for the image, it is a great tribute to science, since it is so sharp and revealing that it could be used to nail down the expansion of the universe and rule out all but the really contrived alternative theories about the solar system being inside a cosmic "void".
But I'm baffled about how the filters that went into making this image were "interpreted as color" the way they were in this image.
According to the Hubble Heritage page, the following filters were used to image NGC 5584: F336W (U), F547M (y), F657N (H-alpha + [N II]), and F814W (I). So there was one ultraviolet filter, one filter that is squarely in the green part of the spectrum, one filter that detects red emission nebulae, and one infrared filter. But how were the original images taken through these filters used to produce the image?
Suddenly a filter centered at 555nm appeared out of nowhere! It isn't mentioned among the filters used to image the galaxy. Nevertheless, a filter centered at 555 nm, which corresponds to [i]yellow-green[/i] light, is used to show the [i]blue[/i] light of the galaxy. The other two filters used is a [i]white[/i] one and an infrared one. What happened to the ultraviolet filter? How did the white filter appear out of nowhere? And what happened to the filter detecting red emission nebulae?
The galaxy looks good enough, but I'm still totally confused. And why not use the filter centered at the red light of emission nebulae to actually show those nebulae in the galaxy? :?: :?: :?: :?:
Maybe I'm the one who is being stupid here. If so, please enlighten me!
Ann