by Ann » Sun Sep 08, 2024 7:02 am
Yes, that's a nice portrait of the most-photographed non-Milky Way galaxy of them all!
But, as is the case in all beauty contests, it is important to show both beautiful people and impressive galaxies in the most flattering light and from the most flattering angles. When it comes to the Andromeda galaxy, most pictures show it just as it looks in the APOD, stretching from lower left to upper right so that its shape looks like Hubble's Law:
But if we position Andromeda according to astronomical convention, so that north should be up and east to the left, Andromeda should look like this:
Apparently we don't like seeing Andromeda "leaning over" the way it does in the T. Rector/B. Wolpa image, because you can't believe how hard it is to find "smaller than 500 KB" images where Andromeda is positioned like this! It's like seeing Fred Astaire dancing in the ceiling - it's just wrong!
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
As for the T. Rector/B. Wolpa picture of Andromeda, I'm critical of the colors of it. Note the extremely red colors of many of the stars, the red color of one of the dust lanes, and the general lack of color elsewhere.
But there is one thing that I really like about T. Rector/B. Wolpa image, and that is the brilliance of the central parts of Andromeda and the faintness of the outer parts. Because that is the way it is with Andromeda.
Look at Achint Thomas' image of Andromeda again. You can see that Andromeda is "leaning the right way", but NGC 205, the elongated satellite galaxy, is located to the lower left of the center of Andromeda and not at the upper right of it. So in this image, north is up, but east is to the right. Note that you can just make out NGC 206, the largest and brightest association of young stars in Andromeda, at lower right.
One lesson you can really draw from Achint Thomas' image is that Andromeda is a yellow galaxy. It is very, very massive, too, because all galaxies with a large and very bright yellow population of stars are always massive.
APOD Robot wrote:
In only about 5 billion years, the Andromeda galaxy may be even easier to see -- as it will likely span the entire night sky -- just before it merges with, or passes right by, our Milky Way Galaxy.
The Andromeda galaxy will become easier to see as it comes closer? I'm not sure about that. The surface brightness of Andromeda will not grow brighter as the galaxy approaches, and instead the stars will become more spread out. Seeing Andromeda when it looms very large in the sky will probably be like spotting the light of the Milky Way in the sky. Impressive, but not all
that impressive.
Ann
Yes, that's a nice portrait of the most-photographed non-Milky Way galaxy of them all!
[float=left][img3="Mirror, mirror, on the wall, what is the the most photographed galaxy of them all?"]https://i.etsystatic.com/11004185/r/il/61a596/2228500727/il_680x540.2228500727_lcu4.jpg[/img3][/float][float=right][img3="I'm the most photographed galaxy of them all! Credit: Subaru (NAOJ), Hubble (NASA/ESA), Mayall (NSF); Processing & Copyright: R. Gendler & R. Croman"]https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/2409/M31_HstSubaruGendler_960.jpg[/img3][/float]
[clear][/clear]
But, as is the case in all beauty contests, it is important to show both beautiful people and impressive galaxies in the most flattering light and from the most flattering angles. When it comes to the Andromeda galaxy, most pictures show it just as it looks in the APOD, stretching from lower left to upper right so that its shape looks like Hubble's Law:
[img3="Edwin Hubble's plot of the Velocity-Distance relationship for galaxies."]https://www.e-education.psu.edu/astro801/sites/www.e-education.psu.edu.astro801/files/image/hubbleslaw_plot.jpg[/img3]
But if we position Andromeda according to astronomical convention, so that north should be up and east to the left, Andromeda should look like this:
[float=right][img3="No no no, don't stand like that, you'll be falling over!"]https://as2.ftcdn.net/v2/jpg/04/51/16/07/1000_F_451160765_whg0H8085ZecdxZi54yygvj1mvp47nNG.jpg[/img3][/float][img3="Andromeda positioned according to normal astronomical convention. Note elongated satellite galaxy NGC 205 to the upper right of the center of Andromeda (in the upper right corner). Credit: T. Rector and B. Wolpa"]https://thumbs.wbm.im/pw/small/a38a4fffcfed31a7d80a59b861a554dd.jpg[/img3]
[clear][/clear]
Apparently we don't like seeing Andromeda "leaning over" the way it does in the T. Rector/B. Wolpa image, because you can't believe how hard it is to find "smaller than 500 KB" images where Andromeda is positioned like this! It's like seeing Fred Astaire dancing in the ceiling - it's just wrong!
[float=left][youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b1AQjcmzvx8[/youtube][/float][float=right][attachment=0]Dancing on the ceiling 1951 Fred Astaire.png[/attachment][/float]
[clear][/clear]
As for the T. Rector/B. Wolpa picture of Andromeda, I'm critical of the colors of it. Note the extremely red colors of many of the stars, the red color of one of the dust lanes, and the general lack of color elsewhere.
But there is one thing that I really like about T. Rector/B. Wolpa image, and that is the brilliance of the central parts of Andromeda and the faintness of the outer parts. Because that is the way it is with Andromeda.
[float=right][img3="NGC 206, the largest and brightest association of young stars in Andromeda. Credit:
Andrea Tamanti "]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b3/NGC206.jpg/1280px-NGC206.jpg[/img3][/float][img3="This picture by Achint Thomas brings out the brightness of the central part of Andromeda and the faintness of the outer parts. "]https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54011460e4b0e522f5da76b1/1603637816403-K6E1TRHAIFVARA4AMWGY/Andromeda+Galaxy?format=2500w[/img3]
[clear][/clear]
Look at Achint Thomas' image of Andromeda again. You can see that Andromeda is "leaning the right way", but NGC 205, the elongated satellite galaxy, is located to the lower left of the center of Andromeda and not at the upper right of it. So in this image, north is up, but east is to the right. Note that you can just make out NGC 206, the largest and brightest association of young stars in Andromeda, at lower right.
One lesson you can really draw from Achint Thomas' image is that Andromeda is a yellow galaxy. It is very, very massive, too, because all galaxies with a large and very bright yellow population of stars are always massive.
[quote]APOD Robot wrote:
In only about 5 billion years, the Andromeda galaxy may be even easier to see -- as it will likely span the entire night sky -- just before it merges with, or passes right by, our Milky Way Galaxy.[/quote]
The Andromeda galaxy will become easier to see as it comes closer? I'm not sure about that. The surface brightness of Andromeda will not grow brighter as the galaxy approaches, and instead the stars will become more spread out. Seeing Andromeda when it looms very large in the sky will probably be like spotting the light of the Milky Way in the sky. Impressive, but not all [b][i]that[/i][/b] impressive.
[img3="The northern Milky Way in the sky, featuring the Summer Triangle (Deneb, Vega, Altair). The southern Milky Way would be brighter and more impressive. Credit: ForestWander"]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/51/Night-sky-milky-way-galaxy-astrophotography_-_West_Virginia_-_ForestWander.jpg/800px-Night-sky-milky-way-galaxy-astrophotography_-_West_Virginia_-_ForestWander.jpg?20120915131753[/img3]
Ann