by MarkBour » Fri Jan 27, 2017 5:26 pm
neufer wrote:... The spiral galaxy, NGC4622 (also called backward galaxy) ...
Ann wrote:... the "Black-Eye Galaxy", M64 ... Ann
Those are just absolutely fascinating ... thanks!
Not too long ago, I was sufficiently unschooled to think that when you saw a spiral galaxy, the curves showed the motion of the dust and stars in the same way as one sees material flowing down a shower drain.
I'd like to learn more about "galactic mechanics", but haven't yet devoted any appreciable amount of time to it. But from my dabbling through APOD, more recently, I have come to the thinking that when you see a spiral galaxy, the arms you see may often be a "history trace" of a rotating bar that kept losing its end material and shrinking. If that were true, then in most cases, the whole thing would be rotating in the same direction as one would move by following the spirals inward. In other words, the arms would "trail".
I don't know if this "history-trace" idea, a term I just made up, is already an established and popular model, or an already debunked idea, but it would seem to be able to be reconciled with what is seen in NGC4622. In its case, I would think that some massive event caused the whole inner part to reverse its direction. Then, after that point, it would have created inner arms that are wrapped in the opposite direction of the outer arms.
And if this model is correct, then it could be that the outer arms are still rotating in opposition to the rotation of the inner part. If there was enough interaction, perhaps through dark matter, they might reverse direction as well, but I would think that would result in a huge mess, if it were possible.
Even if this idea is correct for some galaxies, I'm sure there would be others that would form in different manners altogether, so alternatively, perhaps that would be the case for these two weirdos.
[quote="neufer"]... The spiral galaxy, NGC4622 (also called backward galaxy) ... [/quote][quote="Ann"]... the "Black-Eye Galaxy", M64 ... Ann[/quote]
Those are just absolutely fascinating ... thanks!
Not too long ago, I was sufficiently unschooled to think that when you saw a spiral galaxy, the curves showed the motion of the dust and stars in the same way as one sees material flowing down a shower drain.
I'd like to learn more about "galactic mechanics", but haven't yet devoted any appreciable amount of time to it. But from my dabbling through APOD, more recently, I have come to the thinking that when you see a spiral galaxy, the arms you see may often be a "history trace" of a rotating bar that kept losing its end material and shrinking. If that were true, then in most cases, the whole thing would be rotating in the same direction as one would move by following the spirals inward. In other words, the arms would "trail".
I don't know if this "history-trace" idea, a term I just made up, is already an established and popular model, or an already debunked idea, but it would seem to be able to be reconciled with what is seen in NGC4622. In its case, I would think that some massive event caused the whole inner part to reverse its direction. Then, after that point, it would have created inner arms that are wrapped in the opposite direction of the outer arms.
And if this model is correct, then it could be that the outer arms are still rotating in opposition to the rotation of the inner part. If there was enough interaction, perhaps through dark matter, they might reverse direction as well, but I would think that would result in a huge mess, if it were possible.
Even if this idea is correct for some galaxies, I'm sure there would be others that would form in different manners altogether, so alternatively, perhaps that would be the case for these two weirdos.