APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Fri May 05, 2023 9:35 am

Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 10:32 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 9:20 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 7:11 pm
It would be extremely unlikely for a distant galactic core to have the same Moffat/Gaussian PSF shape that the other stars in the image have. Not impossible, but not something encountered very often. Distinguishing stars from extended objects, even ones that superficially resemble point sources, is a pretty reliable process.
telescope+camera Takahashi CCA250 (250/f5) - ZWO 6200MM pixels: 4960 x 7440
How do I calculate the angle size of a pixel in this picture?
To test if a dwarf galaxy core at 50 Mly distance containing 1 million stars can not in fact be just a point smeared only by the point spread function ?
Well, if I solve the image (against the Gaia DR3 database) it finds 4871 sources that it calculates the PSFs for, and an image scale of 0.78 arcsec/pixel. I could export the extraction data to a spreadsheet and sort on one of the PSF characteristics, like FWHM or eccentricity or skew to group out the sources that aren't apparently stellar, then go and examine those individually. My results would be better if I worked with just one channel (not the color) and in an uncompressed, high dynamic range format like FITS (not JPEG). As I noted, the probability of a galaxy looking exactly like a star is small. With proper high dynamic range data and good S/N, a distant galaxy will still show a profile in the data, even though the core will be the only thing bright enough to see visually and it may appear stellar visually.
Let me try the other way around.
Consider the compact dwarf M60-UCD1 at 54 Mly with mass of 140 MSun. It is visually a disk with a hazy perimeter. Were there similar dense dwarfs of 1 MSun mass, their radius would be 5 times smaller which would still be visibly not a point.
So I accept it: a well seen star can be told from a well seen galaxy, even a compact dwarf type
Image

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 10:32 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 9:20 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 7:11 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 5:39 pm
PSF like point spread function?
But would that work with a distant dwarf galaxy?
Let me think. If a distant Milky Way star and a dwarf far behind Cen A are of the same colour and temperature and look the same in a picture, they must have the same angle area of the radiating surface which the telescope and camera smears to the same spot of their resolving power.
So if the star is 50 kly away and the dwarf galaxy is 50 Mly away, the dwarf's bright point-like core must have 1 million stars. Why not?
It would be extremely unlikely for a distant galactic core to have the same Moffat/Gaussian PSF shape that the other stars in the image have. Not impossible, but not something encountered very often. Distinguishing stars from extended objects, even ones that superficially resemble point sources, is a pretty reliable process.
telescope+camera Takahashi CCA250 (250/f5) - ZWO 6200MM pixels: 4960 x 7440
How do I calculate the angle size of a pixel in this picture?
To test if a dwarf galaxy core at 50 Mly distance containing 1 million stars can not in fact be just a point smeared only by the point spread function ?
Well, if I solve the image (against the Gaia DR3 database) it finds 4871 sources that it calculates the PSFs for, and an image scale of 0.78 arcsec/pixel. I could export the extraction data to a spreadsheet and sort on one of the PSF characteristics, like FWHM or eccentricity or skew to group out the sources that aren't apparently stellar, then go and examine those individually. My results would be better if I worked with just one channel (not the color) and in an uncompressed, high dynamic range format like FITS (not JPEG). As I noted, the probability of a galaxy looking exactly like a star is small. With proper high dynamic range data and good S/N, a distant galaxy will still show a profile in the data, even though the core will be the only thing bright enough to see visually and it may appear stellar visually.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Thu May 04, 2023 9:20 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 7:11 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 5:39 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:33 pm

Visually, maybe. They are easy to distinguish if we're really interested, however. All you need to do is run a star extractor app on the image (better if it's not a JPEG, but even that usually works). Stars all have similar PSFs, quite different from galaxies or any other extended objects. So you get out a list of stars and a list of nonstellar objects. If you're looking for lensed structures, you'd typically be looking for nonstellar objects clustered around a fairly nearby galaxy cluster. Then you'd want spectroscopic data to determine if those objects all had the same redshift.
PSF like point spread function?
But would that work with a distant dwarf galaxy?
Let me think. If a distant Milky Way star and a dwarf far behind Cen A are of the same colour and temperature and look the same in a picture, they must have the same angle area of the radiating surface which the telescope and camera smears to the same spot of their resolving power.
So if the star is 50 kly away and the dwarf galaxy is 50 Mly away, the dwarf's bright point-like core must have 1 million stars. Why not?
It would be extremely unlikely for a distant galactic core to have the same Moffat/Gaussian PSF shape that the other stars in the image have. Not impossible, but not something encountered very often. Distinguishing stars from extended objects, even ones that superficially resemble point sources, is a pretty reliable process.
telescope+camera Takahashi CCA250 (250/f5) - ZWO 6200MM pixels: 4960 x 7440
How do I calculate the angle size of a pixel in this picture?
To test if a dwarf galaxy core at 50 Mly distance containing 1 million stars can not in fact be just a point smeared only by the point spread function ?

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 7:11 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 5:39 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:33 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:26 pm

but background dwarf galaxies with bright cores can look like dull distant stars of Milky Way, can not they
Visually, maybe. They are easy to distinguish if we're really interested, however. All you need to do is run a star extractor app on the image (better if it's not a JPEG, but even that usually works). Stars all have similar PSFs, quite different from galaxies or any other extended objects. So you get out a list of stars and a list of nonstellar objects. If you're looking for lensed structures, you'd typically be looking for nonstellar objects clustered around a fairly nearby galaxy cluster. Then you'd want spectroscopic data to determine if those objects all had the same redshift.
PSF like point spread function?
But would that work with a distant dwarf galaxy?
Let me think. If a distant Milky Way star and a dwarf far behind Cen A are of the same colour and temperature and look the same in a picture, they must have the same angle area of the radiating surface which the telescope and camera smears to the same spot of their resolving power.
So if the star is 50 kly away and the dwarf galaxy is 50 Mly away, the dwarf's bright point-like core must have 1 million stars. Why not?
It would be extremely unlikely for a distant galactic core to have the same Moffat/Gaussian PSF shape that the other stars in the image have. Not impossible, but not something encountered very often. Distinguishing stars from extended objects, even ones that superficially resemble point sources, is a pretty reliable process.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Thu May 04, 2023 5:39 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:33 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:26 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:43 pm
The dots look to me like stars, and the smear(s) like background spiral galaxies.
but background dwarf galaxies with bright cores can look like dull distant stars of Milky Way, can not they
Visually, maybe. They are easy to distinguish if we're really interested, however. All you need to do is run a star extractor app on the image (better if it's not a JPEG, but even that usually works). Stars all have similar PSFs, quite different from galaxies or any other extended objects. So you get out a list of stars and a list of nonstellar objects. If you're looking for lensed structures, you'd typically be looking for nonstellar objects clustered around a fairly nearby galaxy cluster. Then you'd want spectroscopic data to determine if those objects all had the same redshift.
PSF like point spread function?
But would that work with a distant dwarf galaxy?
Let me think. If a distant Milky Way star and a dwarf far behind Cen A are of the same colour and temperature and look the same in a picture, they must have the same angle area of the radiating surface which the telescope and camera smears to the same spot of their resolving power.
So if the star is 50 kly away and the dwarf galaxy is 50 Mly away, the dwarf's bright point-like core must have 1 million stars. Why not?

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by MarkE. » Thu May 04, 2023 4:35 pm

Yes the mirrored star patterns are what got me questioning what i was looking at, if indeed they are stars?

There are nearby(line of sight) galaxies and other objects(?) too that look suspiciously similar to one another but the image isn't the clearest when zoomed in, which makes it difficult to determine exactly what we are looking at!?

...It's possibly nothing, but it caught the eye, so i thought I'd throw it out there, along with a little confusion it seems!

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 4:33 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:26 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:43 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:38 pm

not star pattern, rather background light dots pattern (if what we are hunting is lensing by some hidden mass concentration in Cen A)
But yes, it's hard to imagine a lensing that makes these
The dots look to me like stars, and the smear(s) like background spiral galaxies.
but background dwarf galaxies with bright cores can look like dull distant stars of Milky Way, can not they
Visually, maybe. They are easy to distinguish if we're really interested, however. All you need to do is run a star extractor app on the image (better if it's not a JPEG, but even that usually works). Stars all have similar PSFs, quite different from galaxies or any other extended objects. So you get out a list of stars and a list of nonstellar objects. If you're looking for lensed structures, you'd typically be looking for nonstellar objects clustered around a fairly nearby galaxy cluster. Then you'd want spectroscopic data to determine if those objects all had the same redshift.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Thu May 04, 2023 4:26 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:43 pm
VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:38 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:31 pm

But not mirrored star patterns, nor symmetric mirrored galaxies.
not star pattern, rather background light dots pattern (if what we are hunting is lensing by some hidden mass concentration in Cen A)
But yes, it's hard to imagine a lensing that makes these
The dots look to me like stars, and the smear(s) like background spiral galaxies.
but background dwarf galaxies with bright cores can look like dull distant stars of Milky Way, can not they

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 3:43 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:38 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:31 pm
MarkE wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:24 pm There are many examples of gravitational lensing producing what can be described as 'mirrored' effects, and the 'row of stars' is probably more a line of sight effect(something i expected the reader to figure out for themselves!?) that has another almost identical row nearby, which led to my question.
But not mirrored star patterns, nor symmetric mirrored galaxies.
not star pattern, rather background light dots pattern (if what we are hunting is lensing by some hidden mass concentration in Cen A)
But yes, it's hard to imagine a lensing that makes these
The dots look to me like stars, and the smear(s) like background spiral galaxies.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Thu May 04, 2023 3:38 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:31 pm
MarkE wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:24 pm There are many examples of gravitational lensing producing what can be described as 'mirrored' effects, and the 'row of stars' is probably more a line of sight effect(something i expected the reader to figure out for themselves!?) that has another almost identical row nearby, which led to my question.
But not mirrored star patterns, nor symmetric mirrored galaxies.
not star pattern, rather background light dots pattern (if what we are hunting is lensing by some hidden mass concentration in Cen A)
But yes, it's hard to imagine a lensing that makes these

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 3:31 pm

MarkE wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:24 pm There are many examples of gravitational lensing producing what can be described as 'mirrored' effects, and the 'row of stars' is probably more a line of sight effect(something i expected the reader to figure out for themselves!?) that has another almost identical row nearby, which led to my question.
But not mirrored star patterns, nor symmetric mirrored galaxies.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 3:30 pm

VictorBorun wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 9:02 am
Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:38 am
MarkE wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:06 am Is that evidence of gravitational lensing around the 6 o'Clock position near the outer edge of the white spiral?

There's a neat little row of stars, then a similar more distant looking row close by, with other nearby objects seeming to mirror each other too?

*Best seen on the full resolution image!
I don't see anything that looks like gravitational lensing (something that produces neither lines of stars nor mirrored objects).
MarkE may have been meaning the objects a b c d and a' b' c' d'
Centaurus A lensing.jpgCentaurus A-.jpg
...
Click to view full size image 1 or image 2
Maybe. Nothing there that looks at all like gravitational lensing to me.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by MarkE » Thu May 04, 2023 3:24 pm

There are many examples of gravitational lensing producing what can be described as 'mirrored' effects, and the 'row of stars' is probably more a line of sight effect(something i expected the reader to figure out for themselves!?) that has another almost identical row nearby, which led to my question.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Thu May 04, 2023 9:02 am

Chris Peterson wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 4:38 am
MarkE wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:06 am Is that evidence of gravitational lensing around the 6 o'Clock position near the outer edge of the white spiral?

There's a neat little row of stars, then a similar more distant looking row close by, with other nearby objects seeming to mirror each other too?

*Best seen on the full resolution image!
I don't see anything that looks like gravitational lensing (something that produces neither lines of stars nor mirrored objects).
MarkE may have been meaning the objects a b c d and a' b' c' d'
Centaurus A lensing.jpg
Centaurus A-.jpg
...
Click to view full size image 1 or image 2

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 04, 2023 4:38 am

MarkE wrote: Thu May 04, 2023 3:06 am Is that evidence of gravitational lensing around the 6 o'Clock position near the outer edge of the white spiral?

There's a neat little row of stars, then a similar more distant looking row close by, with other nearby objects seeming to mirror each other too?

*Best seen on the full resolution image!
I don't see anything that looks like gravitational lensing (something that produces neither lines of stars nor mirrored objects).

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by MarkE » Thu May 04, 2023 3:06 am

Is that evidence of gravitational lensing around the 6 o'Clock position near the outer edge of the white spiral?

There's a neat little row of stars, then a similar more distant looking row close by, with other nearby objects seeming to mirror each other too?

*Best seen on the full resolution image!

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Wed May 03, 2023 8:36 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 8:20 pm
Cousin Ricky wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 7:49 pm
orin stepanek wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 6:26 pm If a Black hole lets no mater escape' what are
the jets? Is mater escaping with the jets?
Aside from Hawking radiation (which is negligible), no matter or light is escaping from the black hole itself. The jets are escaping from the accretion disc surrounding the black hole.
I'd phrase that a little differently. I'd say the jets are being fed by matter from the accretion disc. The disc is equatorial, and the jets are polar. They are connected, and obviously both exist outside the BH's event horizon.
To add still more details, the accretion disk struggles to shed its kinetic and potential energy and its spin to let the matter spiral down to the BH.
One exit channel is to warm matter by the friction between a ring and the next ring (the smaller radius the smaller orbital period, so there is in fact some friction) and then to radiate the heat in thermal photons from the surface of the accretion disk.
Another exit channel is to develop orbital electric currents and generate doughnut-shaped magnetic field with a hole around the axis of the rotation.
Yet another way is to send the quickest ions and electrons away along the magnetic lines. That would make a pair of high-speed jets along the axis of the rotation.
Note: the thermal radiation channel does nothing to shed the spin. What saves the day are the ions and electrons that spirals along the magnetic lines, trying to force them into pigtails, and thus exchange their spin with the accretion disk. In the end those ions and electrons move away from the scene and somewhat from the rotation axis, taking spin.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Chris Peterson » Wed May 03, 2023 8:20 pm

Cousin Ricky wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 7:49 pm
orin stepanek wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 6:26 pm If a Black hole lets no mater escape' what are
the jets? Is mater escaping with the jets?
Aside from Hawking radiation (which is negligible), no matter or light is escaping from the black hole itself. The jets are escaping from the accretion disc surrounding the black hole.
I'd phrase that a little differently. I'd say the jets are being fed by matter from the accretion disc. The disc is equatorial, and the jets are polar. They are connected, and obviously both exist outside the BH's event horizon.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Cousin Ricky » Wed May 03, 2023 7:49 pm

orin stepanek wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 6:26 pm If a Black hole lets no mater escape' what are
the jets? Is mater escaping with the jets?
Aside from Hawking radiation (which is negligible), no matter or light is escaping from the black hole itself. The jets are escaping from the accretion disc surrounding the black hole.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Cousin Ricky » Wed May 03, 2023 7:42 pm

APOD Robot wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 4:06 am Cen A is the fifth brightest galaxy on the sky ...
Let’s see...
  1. Milky Way
  2. Large Magellanic Cloud
  3. Small Magellanic Cloud
  4. M31
  5. M33
  6. Centaurus A
  7. ...
Obviously, the Milky Way is not included in the description’s ranking.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by orin stepanek » Wed May 03, 2023 6:26 pm

NGC5128_Lorenzi_960.jpg
If a Black hole lets no mater escape' what are
the jets? Is mater escaping with the jets?
maxresdefault.jpg
Kitty looks like he's been in a fight or too; I'm looking at his broken
tooth!!!!

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by shaileshs » Wed May 03, 2023 2:43 pm

Thank you so much for your detailed response Ann.

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Wed May 03, 2023 2:17 pm

Centaurus A-.jpg
Centaurus A.jpg
...
Why the one red 11 o'clock tail is visually co-directional with the X-ray-bright relativistically-fast jet going toward us?
After the original billionaire BH ran away it left its accretion disk behind, and the spin of the latter must have been inherited by young 55 million Suns BH. Maybe the accretion disk's spin is co-directional with the spin of infalling matter from the core of the galaxy, be it stellar population or some dark matter flows, that gave 55 million Suns to feed the baby BH and another 55 million Suns to feed the pair of jets.
The fact is that the tail of the runaway BH is co-axial with the current pair of jets.

Therefore we know that the red tail is going toward us in 3d. It is rather 3 Mly than 300 kly. At the speed of c/200 the runaway BH must have been travelling for 600 million years (or more if we allow for some invisible tip of the tail. The runaway billionaire BH may be already halfway to the Local cluster, having covered 6 Mly of 12 Mly. The media may be thinner there and the tail of disturbed media dimmer. If it's going to curve into Milky Way, we have another billion years to prepare)
Click to view full size image 1 or image 2

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by VictorBorun » Wed May 03, 2023 1:05 pm

Ann wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 7:18 am
shaileshs wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 4:20 am Multiple things (questions) top of my head - 1) Why jet stream is visible only on 1 side ? 2) Why jet stream is only red in color ? 3) What's the while "halo" filled all around the center ? 4) With such distorted (mixed eliptical/circular) shape, how do we even know/how can we define edge of galaxy and size of galaxy ? 5) We can see stars with spikes obviously in our own milky way and we can clearly see some various size/shaped galaxies in background but apart from those obvious ones, there's 1000s of light sources seen - bright/dim, yellow/white/blue.. how do we know (or how we can make out) how many and which ones are stars v/s galaxies ? Ufffff... I need to read a bit more on these topics.. Thanks in advance for all comments/answers.
Rather than editing my first post, I'll make a new one to post an M87 image that I didn't see before, showing two jets from M87. (Or rather, the image shows two shock waves from the two jets of M87: Ann
On one-tail galaxies (I only mean tails starting right at the centre of the core) we now know one explanation:
a runaway central black hole.

Consider:
1) the current central BH of Cen A weighs only 55 million Suns and thus must be an impostor after the original billionaire BH ran away
2) there was in fact a merger, maybe less than a billion years ago
3) the long red tail at 11 o'clock, however dissipated, does seem to originate rather from the centre than from an arm or dust ring

The author of this APOD image writes:
The rarely imaged long filamentary jet, extending from the core in the upper left of the picture, is the visible result of the nucleo activity and is created by the outflow of gas accumulated in the accretion disk surrounding the supermassive black hole.

But the jets must go in pairs; even when the starting parts of the jets are relativistically fast and the one that speeds toward us is brightened for us and the other one is dimmed, still the warm clouds they create in the media are not relativistically fast and look more symmetrical to us.

To make a 300 kly tail without a counter part you have to merge two billionaire BHs with co-directional spins: such merger pinches the space-time fabric, fires a one-directional gravitation wave packet of some 100 million Suns mass-energy and kicks the merged BH out of the galaxy at some 1500 km/s.

Here is a more fresh and evident (less dissipated) one-tail case:
runaway super massive central black hole.png

Re: APOD: Centaurus A: A Peculiar Island of Stars (2023 May 03)

by Ann » Wed May 03, 2023 7:18 am

shaileshs wrote: Wed May 03, 2023 4:20 am Multiple things (questions) top of my head - 1) Why jet stream is visible only on 1 side ? 2) Why jet stream is only red in color ? 3) What's the while "halo" filled all around the center ? 4) With such distorted (mixed eliptical/circular) shape, how do we even know/how can we define edge of galaxy and size of galaxy ? 5) We can see stars with spikes obviously in our own milky way and we can clearly see some various size/shaped galaxies in background but apart from those obvious ones, there's 1000s of light sources seen - bright/dim, yellow/white/blue.. how do we know (or how we can make out) how many and which ones are stars v/s galaxies ? Ufffff... I need to read a bit more on these topics.. Thanks in advance for all comments/answers.
Rather than editing my first post, I'll make a new one to post an M87 image that I didn't see before, showing two jets from M87. (Or rather, the image shows two shock waves from the two jets of M87:


And yesterday bystander posted an X-ray picture of Cen A, where it is easy to imagine that the blue lobe to the lower right of the dust lane of Cen A has been caused by a jet that is still hidden from our view.


Ann

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