Search found 59 matches

by iampete
Tue Jul 15, 2008 6:49 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Lagoon Nebula (APOD 15 Jul 2008)
Replies: 8
Views: 3539

. . . some of it may have to do with gravity and stellar winds. Probably the rotation of the galaxy and and nearby galaxies. . . On the scale of dust-clouds, I would expect gravitational influences of embedded/nearby stars to be "smooth" rather than "chaotic" in appearance, even...
by iampete
Tue Jul 15, 2008 7:48 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Lagoon Nebula (APOD 15 Jul 2008)
Replies: 8
Views: 3539

Lagoon Nebula (APOD 15 Jul 2008)

The features of the gas clouds remind me of cloud shapes and small features of cyclones, etc. on Earth. On Earth, these features are influenced by small localized atmospheric pressure variations, winds, moisture content differences, among other things. It seems to me that if "empty space" ...
by iampete
Tue Jul 15, 2008 7:19 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: SN 1006 Supernova Remnant (2008 Jul 04)
Replies: 34
Views: 11723

Re: APOD 2008 July 4 - SN 1006 Supernova Remnant

. . . The core's gravity would have caused the matter to curve inwards behind the core, the amount of deflection depending on the distance from the core. Even at the very high speed of the blast front, there would still be deflection of matter, and over the period of a thousand years, the deflected...
by iampete
Fri Jul 11, 2008 10:22 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: What's the opposite side of the sun? (APOD 11 Jul 2008)
Replies: 26
Views: 9849

. . . 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 m...
by iampete
Fri Jul 11, 2008 10:12 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: SN 1006 Supernova Remnant (2008 Jul 04)
Replies: 34
Views: 11723

I have the same opinion on this as Case.

Even if we're wrong, what's the worst that can happen? You will have to return, or sign over to Chandra/Harvard, the millions you will make for posting your results on the APOD forum.:lol:
by iampete
Wed Jul 09, 2008 11:30 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: feeding a black hole (APOD 27 Jun 2008)
Replies: 66
Views: 18793

. . . As she continues to watch, she will see it get closer and closer to the event horizon, slowing down because of the time-stretching effects of gravity in general relativity. :: What Qev called red shift:: However, she will never see it cross the horizon. Instead she sees it stop just short, wh...
by iampete
Mon Jun 30, 2008 8:10 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Triffid Nebula, flux capacitor? (APOD 30 Jun 2008)
Replies: 21
Views: 8610

Qev wrote: (. . . 'snail's head' explanation . . .)
Thanks for the reference and explanation.

Another example of how looks can be deceiving in many of these APOD pix. :!:
by iampete
Mon Jun 30, 2008 4:44 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: feeding a black hole (APOD 27 Jun 2008)
Replies: 66
Views: 18793

Re: feeding a black hole (APOD 27 Jun 2008)

. . . Have we (the proverbial we) actually seen a black hole disappear? . . . I don't believe we have . . . yet. However, in response to questions (lawsuits, even) about the safety of the CERN LHC near Geneva, it is asserted by physicists that the possible creation of microscopic black holes is ben...
by iampete
Mon Jun 30, 2008 4:25 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Triffid Nebula, flux capacitor? (APOD 30 Jun 2008)
Replies: 21
Views: 8610

Triffid Nebula, flux capacitor? (APOD 30 Jun 2008)

re: http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080630.html In the picture at about 10 o'clock from the central star and near the edge of the blue color, there is a feature that looks like the head of a snail which includes the two eye stalks. In my view, these two "stalks" appear to be trails of t...
by iampete
Tue Jun 24, 2008 11:48 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

. . . Is there a cosmologist among you who doesn't believe that time goes only forward? I'm kind of surprised we haven't heard from any fans of negative time yet. Ah, ye of little faith! Once the "Unified Theory of Everything" is perfected, someone will undoubtedly be able to figure out h...
by iampete
Tue Jun 24, 2008 11:37 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: The spiral in the bar in the spiral (APOD 22 Jun 2008)
Replies: 26
Views: 9280

Re: Why is the bar still there?

. . . I couldn't begin to suggest a simple model of how the spiral arms of a spiral galaxy maintain themselves. . . Is it well-established fact that a spiral galaxy will maintain its spiral arms in a stable "end-state"? Is it not possible that the time-constants are such that the time nec...
by iampete
Tue Jun 24, 2008 8:49 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

apodman wrote:(lots of info and recommended reading)
Thanks again for your posts. Google and other research it is.

It's also quite frustrating to me that my 35 year old math and physics texts have become much less intelligible than they were when new. :oops:
by iampete
Mon Jun 23, 2008 10:40 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Star Streams of NGC 5907 (2008 Jun 19)
Replies: 63
Views: 18906

Re: Tumbling thoughts

Since we're talking nonsense .. My 2 cents on "nonsense". Pejorative labels are unhelpful in any discussion. I believe that the consensus is that there exists a mechanism to account for the streams and that mechanism is a companion galaxy. Manifestations of similar streams around other ga...
by iampete
Mon Jun 23, 2008 6:57 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A8.html . . . Thank for the fas.org link - mostly understandable and helpful stuff. From the text: ". . . the Milky Way . . . is not near any center ( expansion models do not allow for a discoverable center ) - a positional state that may not even b...
by iampete
Mon Jun 23, 2008 7:20 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

. . . A 3-D sphere has a 3-D center, but its 2-D surface has no preferred 2-D center point on that surface. Likewise, a 4-D supersphere has a 4-D center, but its 3-D supersurface has no preferred 3-D center point on/in that supersurface. . . Thanks, that makes sense to me; I can even comprehend a &...
by iampete
Mon Jun 23, 2008 3:12 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

. . . The centre isn't *miles* away, it's thirteen milliard *years* away, in that direction, the direction of "past". . . OK, more conceptualization/visualization problems!! It seems to me that the "center" of the universe at the time of the big bang (EDIT: actually just after t...
by iampete
Sun Jun 22, 2008 9:22 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Star Streams of NGC 5907 (2008 Jun 19)
Replies: 63
Views: 18906

Tumbling thoughts

My thoughts from a layman's perspective: The shape of the galaxy under discussion in this thread suggests that the angular momentum (AM) vector is pretty much perpendicular to the galactic plane. Since the galaxy is not a single solid object, for it to be "tumbling" (i.e., a non-trivial co...
by iampete
Sun Jun 22, 2008 10:14 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Star Streams of NGC 5907 (2008 Jun 19)
Replies: 63
Views: 18906

Re: William of Ockham meets NGC 5907

. . . The Magellanic Stream was detected in the 1970s. http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap980826.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magellanic_Stream The caption for the APOD indicates that this stream is a gas cloud, while the wiki article could be interpreted to imply, but does not explicitly state, the ...
by iampete
Sun Jun 22, 2008 9:58 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Star Streams of NGC 5907 (2008 Jun 19)
Replies: 63
Views: 18906

Re: William of Ockham meets NGC 5907

. . . the companion galaxy completely has disappeared. So it is more 'astronomical forensics' to find out what might have happened. . . Disappeared from our view, certainly, but there is an awfully large volume of space in that galaxy that we can't see. Again, things like timing, could be important...
by iampete
Sat Jun 21, 2008 7:08 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Star Streams of NGC 5907 (2008 Jun 19)
Replies: 63
Views: 18906

Re: William of Ockham meets NGC 5907

. . . Next, ask yourself the question why not all -or a large percentage of- galaxies show these faint trails like NGC 5907, perpendicular to the main rotational plane. While I'm not a proponent of the "tumbling" hypothesis, let me proffer the following (in the spirit of Billy Ockham). It...
by iampete
Sat Jun 21, 2008 5:12 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

. . . So I'm sorry I'm no help. . . Quite the contrary, the references are great. While they may not explicitly answer my question, I had not seen either the Cambridge site or the sukidog site before and I expect to spend some time reading and following some of the links they provide. Thank you ver...
by iampete
Sat Jun 21, 2008 2:59 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

Is there any "real" (whatever the definition of real is) evidence of the existence of dimensions greater than the number that we as humans actually experience, or is all of this just the result of playing with mathematics? . . . the four dimensions of space, space, space, and time were al...
by iampete
Thu Jun 19, 2008 5:10 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Eta carinae & the Homunuculus Nebulae (APOD 17 Jun 2008)
Replies: 72
Views: 22568

To question these dimensional analogies further: I remember way back when, we had problems of the type "John has x apples. If Mary takes . . . , etc., etc. How many apples does John have left?" In many cases involving quadratic solutions, there were two answers, one positive, one negative....
by iampete
Sat Jun 14, 2008 5:31 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: M51 Hubble Remix (APOD 14 Jun 2008)
Replies: 5
Views: 3377

M51 Hubble Remix (APOD 14 Jun 2008)

re: http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0806/M51HST-GendlerM.jpg In the picture of these interacting galaxies, NGC5195 seems to have little or no detail. (A quick look elsewhere on the internet yielded no "better" images of this galaxy - not saying they're not out there, but I couldn't ...
by iampete
Sun Jun 08, 2008 9:18 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: Mars Soil Sample Ready to Analyze (APOD 08 Jun 2008)
Replies: 23
Views: 7449

Consistency of material in scoop

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0806/scoop_phoenix_big.jpg If one looks at the front end of the scoop containing the martian soil, there seems to be a strange-looking adhesion effect. What it reminds me of is the appearance of the residue that might be left in a crepe pan when removing a cre...