APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

Post a reply


This question is a means of preventing automated form submissions by spambots.
Smilies
:D :) :ssmile: :( :o :shock: :? 8-) :lol2: :x :P :oops: :cry: :evil: :roll: :wink: :!: :?: :idea: :arrow: :| :mrgreen:
View more smilies

BBCode is ON
[img] is ON
[url] is ON
Smilies are ON

Topic review
   

Expand view Topic review: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Ann » Sun Mar 19, 2023 7:37 pm

AVAO wrote: Sun Mar 19, 2023 9:28 am
Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:05 am
VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:19 am I wonder why the cloud looks so flat. Is it all in one plane which happens to be perpendicular to our line of sight?
In my opinion, it is virtually impossible for the nebula of WR 124 to be two dimensional. It has to be more or less spherical, or possibly two-lobed, in such a way that we are watching one of the lobes face on.

Ann
I think the shape is three dimensional in some way and looks different from each side.
My hypothesis is that this changes depending on the distribution of the surrounding smaller stars or stellar fragments
and for the following reason:

What I mean by this is that the molecular clouds visible in the IR around WR124 are NOT of its own, but are produced by the surrounding smaller stars or nuclei, due to the high radiation pressure of WR124 at its center. WR124 "triggers" only the developement. While this is somewhat contrary to what the current theory describes in detail, it is what I see when I zoom in on the details. I have previously advanced this thesis that the molecular shells of star formation are self-generated and not vice versa as in the classical star formation model. And I continue to stand by this thesis, even if Chris disagrees here, because I SEE that it must be different.

Image

Image
jac berne (flickr)
I think differently.

First of all, we see other Wolf-Rayet stars that are centrally placed inside a nebula. This in itself strongly suggests to me that the nebula is the star's own making.

A fantastic Wolf-Rayet star is WR 140:


Universe Today wrote:

These Bizarre Concentric Rings in Space are Real, Not an Optical Illusion. New Data from JWST Explains What’s Happening

(...) The answer, revealed today, is dust. A new paper published in Nature Astronomy explains how stellar winds in this odd binary system blasts dust into near-perfect concentric circles every time the two stars come close to each other in their eccentric orbits.
Click to play embedded YouTube video.

In this video, unless I'm very much mistaken, the larger star is a non-WR star, probably an O star, whereas the WR star is smaller (because it has already lost so much mass) and it blows a much stronger wind. Whenever the two stars come close, the extremely windy WR star blows gas off of the larger O star. Meanwhile, of course, the WR star keeps blowing off its own outer layers.


AVAO, I think you have been fooled by the clumpy nature of the nebula surrounding Wolf-Rayet star WR 124. There are indeed bright-looking clumps in the nebula that seem to be connected to "cometary tails", as if these clumps were small stars losing gas because of the onslaught of furious ultraviolet light and fast stellar wind atoms and molecules. But these clumps are not stars, just denser knots of gas and dust. We see similar phenomena in planetary nebulas:


What we need to understand is that Wolf-Rayet are evolved stars that no longer support themselves by hydrogen fusion in their cores. Instead, there are layers of different fusion products surrounding their cores, and I think - think, mind you! - that different "fusion layers" turn off and on alternatively, which induces instability in the star and promotes mass loss.

Let's take a look at what I think is going to happen to our own Sun, after it has turned into a red giant and is going to cast off its outer layers:


In case you're wondering, the Asymtotic Giant Branch will be our Sun's second and final rise to gianthood, after it has spent some time as a more modest red clump star, where it will be rather peacefully fusing helium to carbon and oxygen in its core (after it has used up all its core hydrogen and increased its core temperature enough to start core helium fusion in the first place).

But the Sun will run out of core helium, too, and then it will have a "dead" core of carbon and oxygen. Yes, "dead", because the Sun will never have a sufficiently hot core to begin fusing its core carbon and oxygen into heavier elements. Instead, the Sun will fuse helium in a shell around its core.

But wait, there is more. Not only will the Sun be fusing helium in a shell around its dead carbon/oxygen core, but it will also fuse hydrogen in a shell around its inner helium layer. The two actively fusing shells will affect each other in such a way that when one shell is in the process of fusing, the other shell will "turn off". The shells will turn on and off like a beating heart, except that this particular heartbeat will make the entire star pulsate. Eventually, the pulsations will grow so strong that the Sun is going to cast off its outer layers.

The way I understand it, something reasonably similar is going on with the Wolf-Rayet stars, except that their cores are very much hotter and can fuse much heavier elements than our Sun ever will.


White dwarf star GK Persei surrounded by the debris of its own outburst in 1901. The way I understand it, a companion star dumped matter onto white dwarf star GK Persei until GK Persei blew the accreted material off in a nova outburst.

A white dwarf is not a Wolf Rayet star, but I like the picture because it makes it so clear that stuff surrounding the central star has come from the central star itself.

Similarly, I'd say, Wolf Rayet stars keep blowing off their own outer layers, although through a different mechanism than the nova outbursts. And the WR stars do create short-lived nebulas around themselves, created from their own discarded atmospheres.

Ann

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by AVAO » Sun Mar 19, 2023 9:28 am

Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:05 am
VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:19 am I wonder why the cloud looks so flat. Is it all in one plane which happens to be perpendicular to our line of sight?
In my opinion, it is virtually impossible for the nebula of WR 124 to be two dimensional. It has to be more or less spherical, or possibly two-lobed, in such a way that we are watching one of the lobes face on.

Ann
I think the shape is three dimensional in some way and looks different from each side.
My hypothesis is that this changes depending on the distribution of the surrounding smaller stars or stellar fragments
and for the following reason:

What I mean by this is that the molecular clouds visible in the IR around WR124 are NOT of its own, but are produced by the surrounding smaller stars or nuclei, due to the high radiation pressure of WR124 at its center. WR124 "triggers" only the developement. While this is somewhat contrary to what the current theory describes in detail, it is what I see when I zoom in on the details. I have previously advanced this thesis that the molecular shells of star formation are self-generated and not vice versa as in the classical star formation model. And I continue to stand by this thesis, even if Chris disagrees here, because I SEE that it must be different.

Image

Image
jac berne (flickr)

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by bystander » Sun Mar 19, 2023 5:36 am

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sun Mar 19, 2023 3:26 am

AVAO wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 5:54 pm
APOD Robot wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:06 am Image Wolf-Rayet 124
I also like geck's version

Image
biggg:https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/527 ... 8fae_o.png
Credit: NASA/ESA/CSA/ Judy Schmidt

Comment "This version of WR 124 is a combination of Hubble and JWST MIRI data. A press release recently featured the same data, and since this is one of my favorite objects, of course I had to have a go at it. The official release from the ERO team was a little bit dark. I also went ahead and used the same G'MIC processing to remove much of the banding noise from the dark parts of the image, allowing me to make it even brighter."

Red: JWST/MIRI F1800W
Yellow: JWST/MIRI F1280W
Yellow-Green: JWST/MIRI F1130W
Cyan: JWST/MIRI F770W
Blue: HST WF/PC2 F656N
I think got what visually flattened the cloud in APOD-posted NIRCAM+MIRI: of course, the 2-folded use of RGB to present NIRCAM's range and MIRI's range.
When you use a monotonic mapping, the cloud gets a 3d look ok.
And it looks 3d as well in MIRI range only (Blue: F090W + F150W + F770W, Green: F210M + F335M+ F1130W, Red: F444W + F470N + F1280W + F1800W):
Image
And it looks 3d as well in the visual range:
Image

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Chris Peterson » Sun Mar 19, 2023 1:47 am

VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 10:33 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:13 pm
eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:23 pm

Thanks, Chris. The science/math part of my brain said that, but then I doubted myself because of the size of the individual units in the collimator "honeycomb" and quantity of the cells. But what gives JWST 6-sided spikes? One would think 8 or 16 because of the 16 mirrors.
Diffraction is produced by edges. A circular aperture produces a diffraction pattern made up of rings around bright sources. Straight edges produce lines that are perpendicular to the angle of the edge. It doesn't matter how many edges there are, only how many different angles there are. Whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, or 18 edge-aligned hexagons, or a 1000 hole honeycomb, there are only six angles, meaning only six diffraction spikes. (Actually, each edge produces a pair of spikes, one in each direction, so six edge directions produces 12 spikes... but since they overlap each other, we only see 6.)
what, a 7-gonal mirror would give 14 spikes to a bright star?
Yup. An even number of edges will produce the same number of spikes as edges. An odd number will produce twice the number as edges. You'll see it on some APODs taken with ordinary camera lenses. The most common lens irises are made with 9 leaves, and you'll see 18 spikes around bright light sources. See for instance this from last month: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230213.html

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sat Mar 18, 2023 10:33 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:13 pm
eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:23 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:12 pm

It is precisely because gamma ray collimators have hexagonal cells that you see hexagonal diffraction spikes in gamma ray imagery. It does not matter whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, 18 hexagonal apertures, or a thousand hexagonal aperture. Other than the amount of energy that ends up in the diffraction spikes, the geometry of those spikes will be the same.
Thanks, Chris. The science/math part of my brain said that, but then I doubted myself because of the size of the individual units in the collimator "honeycomb" and quantity of the cells. But what gives JWST 6-sided spikes? One would think 8 or 16 because of the 16 mirrors.
Diffraction is produced by edges. A circular aperture produces a diffraction pattern made up of rings around bright sources. Straight edges produce lines that are perpendicular to the angle of the edge. It doesn't matter how many edges there are, only how many different angles there are. Whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, or 18 edge-aligned hexagons, or a 1000 hole honeycomb, there are only six angles, meaning only six diffraction spikes. (Actually, each edge produces a pair of spikes, one in each direction, so six edge directions produces 12 spikes... but since they overlap each other, we only see 6.)
what, a 7-gonal mirror would give 14 spikes to a bright star?

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Chris Peterson » Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:13 pm

eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:23 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:12 pm
eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:56 am I was in nuclear medicine for 25 years. Our cameras have no mirrors (or lenses, unless you count lead collimation), but we regularly see six-sided diffraction spikes in the images when the detectors are over-saturated. Is there something about JWST that dictates the six-sided spikes or is it just the degree of over-saturation that makes it 6 and not 4 or 8? I guess since the septa in the nuclear medicine collimators are hexagonal that might make the spikes six-sided, but there are literally thousands in one FOV, so maybe not.
It is precisely because gamma ray collimators have hexagonal cells that you see hexagonal diffraction spikes in gamma ray imagery. It does not matter whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, 18 hexagonal apertures, or a thousand hexagonal aperture. Other than the amount of energy that ends up in the diffraction spikes, the geometry of those spikes will be the same.
Thanks, Chris. The science/math part of my brain said that, but then I doubted myself because of the size of the individual units in the collimator "honeycomb" and quantity of the cells. But what gives JWST 6-sided spikes? One would think 8 or 16 because of the 16 mirrors.
Diffraction is produced by edges. A circular aperture produces a diffraction pattern made up of rings around bright sources. Straight edges produce lines that are perpendicular to the angle of the edge. It doesn't matter how many edges there are, only how many different angles there are. Whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, or 18 edge-aligned hexagons, or a 1000 hole honeycomb, there are only six angles, meaning only six diffraction spikes. (Actually, each edge produces a pair of spikes, one in each direction, so six edge directions produces 12 spikes... but since they overlap each other, we only see 6.)

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Chris Peterson » Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:06 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:48 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:16 pm
In terms of physical font, they may well be graphically identical. In terms of logical characters, they are defined differently, which makes sense when you consider things like screen readers for the blind or network scanners constructing search indexes.
ImageIn physical terms the Einstein ring here is round while the letter Ø has height > width
Diameter sign ⌀ and empty set ∅ are harder to tell apart.
Is it just me or does the galaxy disk extend more 1 o'clock than 7 o'clock from its core?
Then again there is light pollution from the foreground stars eating the 7 o'clock part.
Suggesting greek letters Φϕ … oh no, those, too, can be equitailed
Any of these characters can have any aspect ratio, tall, wide, whatever. That's a decision by the font designer, not something intrinsic to the logical character in any way. They can be graphically identical to each other, or designed to look very different. A matter of aesthetics only.

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by AVAO » Sat Mar 18, 2023 5:54 pm

APOD Robot wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:06 am Image Wolf-Rayet 124
I also like geck's version

Image
biggg:https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/527 ... 8fae_o.png
Credit: NASA/ESA/CSA/ Judy Schmidt

Comment "This version of WR 124 is a combination of Hubble and JWST MIRI data. A press release recently featured the same data, and since this is one of my favorite objects, of course I had to have a go at it. The official release from the ERO team was a little bit dark. I also went ahead and used the same G'MIC processing to remove much of the banding noise from the dark parts of the image, allowing me to make it even brighter."

Red: JWST/MIRI F1800W
Yellow: JWST/MIRI F1280W
Yellow-Green: JWST/MIRI F1130W
Cyan: JWST/MIRI F770W
Blue: HST WF/PC2 F656N

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:48 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:16 pm
Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:03 am
VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:06 am

Are they really different symbols?
empty set (U+2205)

You are right, they are different.

Ann
diameter sign (U+2300)
latin capital letter o with stroke (U+00D8) Ø
In terms of physical font, they may well be graphically identical. In terms of logical characters, they are defined differently, which makes sense when you consider things like screen readers for the blind or network scanners constructing search indexes.
ImageIn physical terms the Einstein ring here is round while the letter Ø has height > width
Diameter sign ⌀ and empty set ∅ are harder to tell apart.
Is it just me or does the galaxy disk extend more 1 o'clock than 7 o'clock from its core?
Then again there is light pollution from the foreground stars eating the 7 o'clock part.
Suggesting greek letters Φϕ … oh no, those, too, can be equitailed

On the second look there seems to be a black foreground line crossing the Einstein ring along the galaxy disk… Or is the galaxy disk in fact just a gravi-lens artifact?

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by eljayhalflife » Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:34 pm

eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:23 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:12 pm
eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:56 am I was in nuclear medicine for 25 years. Our cameras have no mirrors (or lenses, unless you count lead collimation), but we regularly see six-sided diffraction spikes in the images when the detectors are over-saturated. Is there something about JWST that dictates the six-sided spikes or is it just the degree of over-saturation that makes it 6 and not 4 or 8? I guess since the septa in the nuclear medicine collimators are hexagonal that might make the spikes six-sided, but there are literally thousands in one FOV, so maybe not.
It is precisely because gamma ray collimators have hexagonal cells that you see hexagonal diffraction spikes in gamma ray imagery. It does not matter whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, 18 hexagonal apertures, or a thousand hexagonal aperture. Other than the amount of energy that ends up in the diffraction spikes, the geometry of those spikes will be the same.
Thanks, Chris. The science/math part of my brain said that, but then I doubted myself because of the size of the individual units in the collimator "honeycomb" and quantity of the cells. But what gives JWST 6-sided spikes? Is it a function of the 18 mirrors /3?.

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by eljayhalflife » Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:23 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:12 pm
eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:56 am I was in nuclear medicine for 25 years. Our cameras have no mirrors (or lenses, unless you count lead collimation), but we regularly see six-sided diffraction spikes in the images when the detectors are over-saturated. Is there something about JWST that dictates the six-sided spikes or is it just the degree of over-saturation that makes it 6 and not 4 or 8? I guess since the septa in the nuclear medicine collimators are hexagonal that might make the spikes six-sided, but there are literally thousands in one FOV, so maybe not.
It is precisely because gamma ray collimators have hexagonal cells that you see hexagonal diffraction spikes in gamma ray imagery. It does not matter whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, 18 hexagonal apertures, or a thousand hexagonal aperture. Other than the amount of energy that ends up in the diffraction spikes, the geometry of those spikes will be the same.
Thanks, Chris. The science/math part of my brain said that, but then I doubted myself because of the size of the individual units in the collimator "honeycomb" and quantity of the cells. But what gives JWST 6-sided spikes? One would think 8 or 16 because of the 16 mirrors.

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Fred the Cat » Sat Mar 18, 2023 3:18 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:19 am I wonder why the cloud looks so flat. Is it all in one plane which happens to be perpendicular to our line of sight?
Line of sight is discussed in the " frame" link for Wolf-Rayet (WR) nebula M 1-67.

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Chris Peterson » Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:16 pm

Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:03 am
VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:06 am
Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 8:59 am


Null sign or Danish letter Ø detail from APOD 18 March 2023.png


This galaxy looks like the null sign, you mean? This? :arrow:

Or maybe it is a Danish letter? You know that Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, is spelled "København" in Danish?

Sorry for exaggerating the ø!

Ann
Are they really different symbols?
empty set (U+2205)

You are right, they are different.

Ann
diameter sign (U+2300)
latin capital letter o with stroke (U+00D8) Ø
In terms of physical font, they may well be graphically identical. In terms of logical characters, they are defined differently, which makes sense when you consider things like screen readers for the blind or network scanners constructing search indexes.

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Chris Peterson » Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:13 pm

Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:05 am
VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:19 am I wonder why the cloud looks so flat. Is it all in one plane which happens to be perpendicular to our line of sight?
In my opinion, it is virtually impossible for the nebula of WR 124 to be two dimensional. It has to be more or less spherical, or possibly two-lobed, in such a way that we are watching one of the lobes face on.

Ann
The scientific term for the sort of shapes you're trying to describe is "blobby". (And I agree with your assessment.)

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Chris Peterson » Sat Mar 18, 2023 2:12 pm

eljayhalflife wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 4:56 am I was in nuclear medicine for 25 years. Our cameras have no mirrors (or lenses, unless you count lead collimation), but we regularly see six-sided diffraction spikes in the images when the detectors are over-saturated. Is there something about JWST that dictates the six-sided spikes or is it just the degree of over-saturation that makes it 6 and not 4 or 8? I guess since the septa in the nuclear medicine collimators are hexagonal that might make the spikes six-sided, but there are literally thousands in one FOV, so maybe not.
It is precisely because gamma ray collimators have hexagonal cells that you see hexagonal diffraction spikes in gamma ray imagery. It does not matter whether you have a single hexagonal aperture, 18 hexagonal apertures, or a thousand hexagonal aperture. Other than the amount of energy that ends up in the diffraction spikes, the geometry of those spikes will be the same.

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Ann » Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:05 am

VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:19 am I wonder why the cloud looks so flat. Is it all in one plane which happens to be perpendicular to our line of sight?
In my opinion, it is virtually impossible for the nebula of WR 124 to be two dimensional. It has to be more or less spherical, or possibly two-lobed, in such a way that we are watching one of the lobes face on.

Ann

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Ann » Sat Mar 18, 2023 11:03 am

VictorBorun wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:06 am
Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 8:59 am
alex555 wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:47 am At the very top left there is a funny galaxy which looks like the empty set in math.

Alex.

Null sign or Danish letter Ø detail from APOD 18 March 2023.png


This galaxy looks like the null sign, you mean? This? :arrow:

Or maybe it is a Danish letter? You know that Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, is spelled "København" in Danish?

Sorry for exaggerating the ø!

Ann
Are they really different symbols?
empty set (U+2205)
You are right, they are different. And sorry for sort of messing up what you wrote in my reply.

Ann

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:19 am

I wonder why the cloud looks so flat. Is it all in one plane which happens to be perpendicular to our line of sight?

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Holger Nielsen » Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:08 am

I, too, find the diffraction spikes visually disturbing, but the purpose of Webb is not to produce aestetically pleasing images.
Note that there are eight spikes, six originating from the hexagonal mirrors and two more ("horizontal") from the three spokes carrying the secondary mirror.
The following illustration from https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang ... bb-spikes/ might be helpful:
Image
It is the "vertical" spoke which produces the "horisontal" spikes. The other two spokes also produce spikes, but they overlap those produced by the mirrors. As a non-English speaker I hope that "spoke" is the correct term :ssmile: (This should be a high-resolution image, but I can't figure out how to enlarge it on this page)

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sat Mar 18, 2023 9:06 am

Ann wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 8:59 am
alex555 wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:47 am At the very top left there is a funny galaxy which looks like the empty set in math.

Alex.

Null sign or Danish letter Ø detail from APOD 18 March 2023.png


This galaxy looks like the null sign, you mean? This? :arrow:

Or maybe it is a Danish letter? You know that Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, is spelled "København" in Danish?

Sorry for exaggerating the ø!

Ann
Are they really different symbols?
empty set (U+2205)
diameter sign (U+2300)
latin capital letter o with stroke (U+00D8) Ø

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by Ann » Sat Mar 18, 2023 8:59 am

alex555 wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:47 am At the very top left there is a funny galaxy which looks like the empty set in math.

Alex.
Null sign or Danish letter Ø detail from APOD 18 March 2023.png
Null sign or Danish letter Ø detail from APOD 18 March 2023.png (50.96 KiB) Viewed 4005 times

This galaxy looks like the null sign, you mean? This? :arrow:

Or maybe it is a Danish letter? You know that Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, is spelled "København" in Danish?

Sorry for exaggerating the ø!

Ann

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sat Mar 18, 2023 8:58 am

I would never thought of such colour representation but why not?
The stars are in the near infrared only, so they are represented truly.
Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18) legend.jpg
This image combines various filters from both Webb imaging instruments, with the color red assigned to wavelengths of 4.44, 4.7, 12.8, and 18 microns (F444W, F470N, F1280W, F1800W), green to 2.1, 3.35, and 11.3 microns (F210M, F335M, F1130W), and blue to 0.9, 1.5, and 7.7 microns (F090W, F150W, F770W).

But what about the IR colour of the Empty Set Galaxy?
Well, it is not in the MIRI's frame, so it's orange comes from 2.1, 3.35, 4.44, 4.7 microns

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by VictorBorun » Sat Mar 18, 2023 8:47 am

alex555 wrote: Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:47 am At the very top left there is a funny galaxy which looks like the empty set in math.

Alex.
is it that the galaxy is gravi-lensing and representing twice a background quasar?
Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18).jpg
Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18).jpg (14.69 KiB) Viewed 4009 times

Re: APOD: Wolf-Rayet 124 (2023 Mar 18)

by alex555 » Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:47 am

At the very top left there is a funny galaxy which looks like the empty set in math.

Alex.

Top