H
hecd2
Guest
No spin at all. If you look at the history of this discussion you will see that buffalo’s claim is that the enhancement of images and the use of false colour and colouration by NASA is wrong and (his words) “can lead to distortion and outright lies”. In this case, it is not NASA that is enhancing the image but Sulentic. By the way, I have no problem with any scientist including Sulentic using colouration and enhancement techniques to help in the visualisation of of features of interest.hecd2:![]()
Wow, that’s some heavy spin!In any case it’s the Sulentic print that has been artificially enhanced and false-coloured, so according to buffalo’s claims, it’s Sulentic who should be vehemently suspected of distortion and outright lies. It’s such a pity when one’s unfair accusations backfire against one’s heroes.
Well, Arp’s website claims that SSTI was suppressing the feature he was interested in, but in my view the image looks like a pretty well printed image to me, with detail across the density range and the frame. If NASA and SSTI were trying to suppress data, then they made a pretty poor job of it, because the feature in question is plainly there in the original image. Don’t forget that although Arp and Sulentic are obsessed by that one feature, there are other interesting and important details to see in the frame, many of which were lost by Sulentic’s stretching and colouration.The point wasn’t that there is something wrong with trying to reveal the truth to people, but trying to conceal it! Which is exactly what NASA and SSTI were trying to do - conceal the truth, unashamedly and embarrassingly. Sulentic was trying to reveal the truth.
Really? How do you know that it has been “artificially” cut off? How do you know what it’s supposed to look like? I can see both spiral arms clearly in the original image, and I have no reason to think that the density of the print in the arms and the main body do not fairly reflect the luminosoty of those regions - do you?The galaxy’s arm looks like it’s artificially cut off.
Indeed it is, and I have no problem with that (but buffalo does - he thinks that NASA enhances and colours images and that “can lead to distortion and outright lies” - he says so despite being unable to produce a single example. Your example only shows that enhancement and false colouration are legitimate tools).But the point of the “deep print” picture is to highlight the luminous bridge between the galaxy and the quasar in the upper right corner.
Really? Obviously physically connected? In the same way that this image shows that the person is obviously physically connected to the moon?And it does make it very easy to see that they are obviously physically connected - only a big banger would say otherwise!
Awww. How sweet! Obviously gravity acts in a strange way in the vicinity of NGC4319 and is causing a teardrop (MK205) to drip from it. Right.In fact, if you turn the picture upside-down it looks like an eye with a teardrop dripping from it - how fitting!
Well he has got a few. But if Arp is right and red-shift is not associated with velocity and distance but with some inherent physics in the body (what physics?) then there should be examples all over the sky since we can see billions of galaxies and hundreds of thousands of quasars. And Arp has been beefing about this one case for 38 years. It seems to me far more likely that what we are seeing here is not physical connection but a simple coincidence of features in te region of one of billions of galaxies in the universe.This is what mainstream science has come to: releasing a deceptive picture with press release to match, all to try and save the foundation of the Big Bang theory - their red-shift interpretation. If anyone is interested in this, you will find that Arp has a huge collection of images demonstrating that there are multitudes of these galaxy/quasar pairings as well as some galaxy/galaxy pairings, where the first one has a low redshift and the second a high redshift.
Arp, the Burbridges and Narlikar have had a fair crack of the whip and they have failed to convince very many of their peers in the professional community because the interpretation of quasars as the cores of high red shift AGNs stands up well and because the cosmological, gravitational and Doppler sources for redshift are supported by the data; and because there is no other evidence for the existence of intrinsic red-shift (or any hint as to what physics would produce it).
Not quite the same, because we have to take into account peculiar velocity and gravitational effects such as the Sachs-Wolfe effects on the CMB. But quite close.But this contradicts the standard interpretation of redshift which says that these objects at the same distance from us should have the same redshift value.
Given a choice most Catholics would prefer a Big Bang to a Steady State universe from a philosophical perspective, because the former implies a beginning to the universe, but you seem wedded to any and every fringe idea or crank who comes along (I’m not saying that Arp is a crank by the way, but Behe has become one and Sungenis always was one) and opposed to mainstream science on principle (without actually knowing enough science to be able to properly discern). Why?
Alec
evolutionpages.com/big_bang_no_myth.htm