to bottom   SPINNING SMALL TOPS STICK TO THE ARMS OF GALAXIES


WOODTICKS FESTOON THE ARMS OF GALAXIES

These
are either
globular clusters
glued to galaxy arms, or
small (say) irregular galaxies
whose interstellar gases and dusts
have been stripped away exposing the
inner workings in fundamental
skeletons, nakedly clear


WOODTICK GLIDES ALONG A LIMB OF BAR GALAXY NGC 1365

This
may be
the residual
of a former irregular
or dwarf galaxy now trapped on
a limb of NGC 1365 and
gliding along as
a woodtick



The
little
engine that could,
chugging along the limb of a
major arm in bar galaxy Ngc 1365. Here
you can see a vapor trail being dragged
as the little engine chugs along
in its own time, in its
own direction












Above, in blue,
and green,
another trail is
exposed, racing on the inside
left of the woodtick in parallel lines
made of excited stars well up onto the
limb proper, where something has
recently glided along, running
silently, running deep


The
excited
star trail
vertically coming
down from the top of the
image ends abruptly right at the
woodtick, in a major magnifying slice of
'lens', in fact cutting the woodtick in half.
Can you figure out what these 'slices of lens' are?
I have been noticing them for 4 years and still
do not have a clear idea - a tiny piece
of image mispatch, or a slice of
matter which refracts light
passing through in an
entirely different
way. I lean in
favor to the
refraction theory,
more than to mismatched patches.
Refraction principles bang the bell boldly, blow
the bugle blaringly, roar the horns hard
in clarion calls in the ether IQ,
(ahem) us old poets, eh










The
woodtick
is actually much
larger. Cooling fins of
a dynamo (a dynamo looks like a
general electric motor) arc in concentric
coherencies of exited stars at right angles
to the line of the vertical trail-vector.
It can be assumed the cooling fins
are associated with the
woodtick since
similar are
seen in
other
star objects


See other 'dynamos' with cooling fins here



PS.,
notice
the bright
white star at the
top of the picture frame,
looking very star-fish like. The
fact of curving starfish arms seems
to preclude the artificiality of lens struts
artifacts inputted by the Hubble telescope. It
may well be the star-fish star is showing
us some of its FLARES. Also, in the
next two views, you can see
how deeply irregular
the arm surface is






A very
similar
looking object,
including a transparent
lens cap, has turned
up in M63



An incising
lens (diamond blue)
is centered over Doradus





IN CENTAURUS A, A WOODTICK CLINGS TO THE LIP OF A COLLISION-CAUSED CHASM



This
tiny conal
shaped hot blue star
clump is explored in greater
context here in a study of galaxy arms

IN NGC 4603, A TINY SPINNING TOP IS PERFECTLY FORMED













A very small
precise semi-arc
incise cuts a darker
area to the left of the
spinning top the incise as if
seeing into a magnifying glass. This
incise is either a mispatch when engineers
formulated the image, or 'cells' actually do occur
which refract light (magnify) in an entirely different
way than the matter around the cell. It is also
possible, because of the right angle line
to the 'cell', that it may be a part
of a larger part-hidden
structure for the
spinning top





Semi-arc
incises are
a way of life in
galaxies. When you have
seen one, you have seen them all,
so to speak. What they are is a mystery
to old popeye here, but, extensively explored,
for instance in these images of the Large Magellanic Cloud.
The leading theory from the hope box is bubbles of gas,
molecules, and/or dust of different refractive
medias. In the case of the LMC, the
'bubbles' almost dominate the
whole of the LMC form. In
the case of the incise
in Ngc 4603, it
is possible
the incise is
a tympani resonator
at the backside of the spinner
change alignment in galaxy position allowing
use to see both the front, and the back peeking through

Major LMC incise up by the Tarantula Nebula (upper left)



A semi-arc
incise of irregular
yet clear-edged form hangs
out in a tangled arm mess on the
outskirts of Ngc 6946, the incise to
the right of a 'rattle', the incise
itself with another at its base
as right angles to the
vertical semi-arc



A major
incise as an
oval rather than semi-arc
dominates the front face of Ngc 1232,
the incises a major artifact in
this giant galaxy



IN NGC 4038, A GIANT WOODTICK ('SPINNER') IS SO DIFFERENT, IT TALKS ENTROPY DYNAMICS AT EVERY ANGLE

See fabulous Ngc 4038 tympani resonator images here


   

The
image of
the woodtick
is so tenuous, real
bright high enhancements
are hard to achieve which can
show off its stuff, instead, several
color variations each show something different
















Notice
how far out
sticks the little
yellow tongue, like the
cock of an alligator. Tongues in
cores are an important subject
is understanding galaxies

Other
woodticks
have a more specific
'spindle' form, from specific cause,
such as powerful Neutron stars, for instance in
the Crab and Vela nebulas as seen by Chandra, and in
the Crab nebula as seen by Hubble





Now notice,
so there but not
there as to be subliminal,
a cyclonnic swirl in a closeup of Andromeda,
the cyclonnic form can be seen in a blink by scrolling the
image up and down using cursors, watch, then, the cyclonnics 'swirl'. It
is thought by myself that perhaps a 'woodtick' is below ground. The
Andromeda cyclonnic seems to have a dragging trail (vectored
south-east) similar to trails seen in the Antenna
and Ngc 4603 woodticks above











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