Chris Peterson wrote:
Most galaxies are inherently low contrast structures- in order to see them as we do in images, a strong "S" shaped transfer function is almost always applied to compress the range of the bright and dim regions, and to expand the middle. This also helps match the huge dynamic range of the object to the very limited dynamic range of our display devices. But it also significantly distorts the radial intensity profile of galaxies in images, so you can't fully trust what you're seeing in very bright regions like the core.
That is certainly true. In particular, I think it's common for photographers to "brighten the arms" and dim the center" in order to bring out as much detail as possible.
James D Wray, who took the UBV color images of "The Color Atlas of Galaxies", never fiddled with the surface brightnesses of galaxies. What you saw was what you got. It's quite interesting to look at Wray's image of famous barred spiral galaxy NGC 1300, for example. In Wray's image, NGC 1300 looks like a bright, almost circular yellow bulge, with some grayish "fuzz" far from the bulge on both sides of it!
What about NGC 1309? In Wray's image, its surface brightness is quite high, and the two most obvious arms are bluish and very broad. Its inner disk is greenish (from A-type stars) and its yellowish bulge is very small and not particularly bright at all. Admittedly its nucleus is sufficiently bright to look white. Wray wrote:
From an evolutionary perspective we note that the galaxy is dominated by a present burst of star formation activity which, on the basis of the general lack of any significant yellow disk population, may be unprecedented in its evolutionary history. A small blue galaxy is visible at 31.3.
That small blue galaxy is the fantastic barred spiral so gloriously portrayed in this Hubble image, processed by Martin Pugh.
Ann