by kovil » Mon Jan 30, 2006 3:19 am
A most curious item.
A different thread questioner was thinking that it is two stars, so I looked and it looks like two galaxies. Definately two galaxies, not stars losing atmosphere. Although gas giants might look like that, hard to tell.
If it is two galaxies they are so identical as to be suspect. There are small differences, but . . .
Another idea is ; can there be a strong gravitational lens, like a massive dark object directly in front of the one galaxy and it is lensing it into two !!
Or would it lens it into 4. I did see a photo of a star being lensed into four distinct objects.
The galaxy would be much further away, and a massive dark object might give off some other clues to its presence other than lensing the galaxy into two images.
How costly would it be, and how long a lead time is necessary to inspect this object with other frequency telescopes, and visible?
Or is this an image processing error and somehow this galaxy got imposed in the photo twice?
There are enough differences to feel that they are two distinctly different objects, and they are galaxies by the details.
A most curious item.
A different thread questioner was thinking that it is two stars, so I looked and it looks like two galaxies. Definately two galaxies, not stars losing atmosphere. Although gas giants might look like that, hard to tell.
If it is two galaxies they are so identical as to be suspect. There are small differences, but . . .
Another idea is ; can there be a strong gravitational lens, like a massive dark object directly in front of the one galaxy and it is lensing it into two !!
Or would it lens it into 4. I did see a photo of a star being lensed into four distinct objects.
The galaxy would be much further away, and a massive dark object might give off some other clues to its presence other than lensing the galaxy into two images.
How costly would it be, and how long a lead time is necessary to inspect this object with other frequency telescopes, and visible?
Or is this an image processing error and somehow this galaxy got imposed in the photo twice?
There are enough differences to feel that they are two distinctly different objects, and they are galaxies by the details.