by apodman » Fri Jul 11, 2008 8:12 pm
Old views of the "mapped" Milky Way showed a big blind wedge on the "other side" of the large and obscuring Galaxy Center.
Allowing that our methods have improved for seeing through the central region, we should still be surer (correlated by more methods and with a better view) of the arms on "our side" of the galaxy.
So the desire to make a balanced picture and the actuality of publishing balanced illustrations belies the truth that, until we get a z-axis view beamed to us, we will continue to know more about "our side" no matter what advancements are made.
Now compare the quest to discover and name the spiral arms to the quest to do the same for the contents of the solar system. In the solar system we are dealing with objects, and it still took a long time to get a handle on the contents. The arms of the galaxy are not objects to discover, rather associations among great numbers of objects and looser materials.
So not only do we have to observe the objects and other materials that make up the arms, but we have to find evidence that they are associated in a mappable arm. That might take a long time, as a discovery is not a discovery, it's an arguable opinion.
Now consider Pluto. After we had a pretty good handle on the contents of the solar system, we went back and recategorized the planets and other large objects. After the good name of Pluto has been spread around the world for decades, nobody in school will learn it as part of the list of the planets any more. In the distant future, the same will be true of some spiral arm or other. A millennium of school children will grow up knowing its name, and then some day it will be demoted and forgotten.
So, rigelan and bystander and anyone else out there who has studied all the charts, your list is good enough for me for now. But in 10,000 years I bet there will be some changes.
Old views of the "mapped" Milky Way showed a big blind wedge on the "other side" of the large and obscuring Galaxy Center.
Allowing that our methods have improved for seeing through the central region, we should still be surer (correlated by more methods and with a better view) of the arms on "our side" of the galaxy.
So the desire to make a balanced picture and the actuality of publishing balanced illustrations belies the truth that, until we get a z-axis view beamed to us, we will continue to know more about "our side" no matter what advancements are made.
Now compare the quest to discover and name the spiral arms to the quest to do the same for the contents of the solar system. In the solar system we are dealing with [i]objects[/i], and it still took a long time to get a handle on the contents. The arms of the galaxy are [i]not objects[/i] to discover, rather associations among great numbers of objects and looser materials.
So not only do we have to observe the objects and other materials that make up the arms, but we have to find evidence that they are associated in a mappable arm. That might take a long time, as a discovery is not a discovery, it's an arguable opinion.
Now consider Pluto. After we had a pretty good handle on the contents of the solar system, we went back and recategorized the planets and other large objects. After the good name of Pluto has been spread around the world for decades, nobody in school will learn it as part of the list of the planets any more. In the distant future, the same will be true of some spiral arm or other. A millennium of school children will grow up knowing its name, and then some day it will be demoted and forgotten.
So, rigelan and bystander and anyone else out there who has studied all the charts, your list is good enough for me for now. But in 10,000 years I bet there will be some changes.