APOD 20050628 - "false colour"

Comments and questions about the APOD on the main view screen.
Post Reply
Boldra
Ensign
Posts: 50
Joined: Tue Dec 21, 2004 11:36 am
Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Contact:

APOD 20050628 - "false colour"

Post by Boldra » Tue Jun 28, 2005 2:13 pm

I found the usage of "false colour" in todays APOD somehow incongruent... Surely it's enough to say that there are radio waves visible in the above image without saying that they're falsely coloured? What colour do people think radio waves are anyway?

I realise this kind of thing can cause all sorts of confusion for some, but what's next...?
Explanation: Together, the radio lobes span over one million light years (light years are a distance, not a time) -- what caused them? In the center is a large but peculiar elliptical galaxy (galaxies are not the same thing as solar systems, they're much bigger) dubbed NGC 1316. Detailed inspection of the NGC 1316 system indicates that it began absorbing a small neighboring galaxy about 100 million years ago (actually much longer, but what we're seeing now happened 75 million years ago) . Gas from the galactic collision has fallen inward toward the massive central black hole, with friction heating the gas to 10 million (celsius or fahrenheit, you choose) degrees. For reasons not yet well understood, two oppositely pointed fast moving jets (jets as in jacuzzi, not jets as in airport) of particles then developed, eventually smashing into the ambient material on either side of the giant elliptical galaxy (because space isn't really empty). The result is a huge reservoir of hot gas that emits radio waves, observed as the orange (false-color) radio lobes in the above image. The radio image is superposed on an optical survey image of the same part of the sky (which might not have been falsely coloured, but the spikes on the stars definitely aren't really there). Strange patterns in the radio lobes likely indicate slight changes in the directions of the jets.
Maybe the solution is to just have a disclaimer somewhere: "Images appearing on this site may not match what you would see with your own eyes (YMMV)"?

* apologies if you're confused by the different spellings of colour in this post, they were mostly intentional.

User avatar
BMAONE23
Commentator Model 1.23
Posts: 4076
Joined: Wed Feb 23, 2005 6:55 pm
Location: California

Post by BMAONE23 » Wed Jun 29, 2005 2:01 pm

I prefer the false color enhancements my self as this does serve to make the unseen, viewable. Without the enhancements all you would see is this
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap000816.html
which is only the small central part of the picture. Where the eliptical galaxy ends, the radio lobes begin.

User avatar
Orca
Commander
Posts: 508
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 6:58 pm
Location: Portland, OR

Post by Orca » Wed Jun 29, 2005 2:49 pm

I find it interesting that people assume an object is more "real" if it is photographed in the same tiny part of the EM spectrum that our eyes are sensitive to (at least what our brains tell us our eyes are actually seeing).

But then...I suppose there is a "tactile element" that makes us want to know how an object would appear to our eyes...first hand through the visor of a spacesuit.

Recycled Electrons
Ensign
Posts: 14
Joined: Wed Jun 15, 2005 9:57 pm
Location: The last scattering surface.

Post by Recycled Electrons » Thu Jun 30, 2005 12:05 am

Orca wrote:I find it interesting that people assume an object is more "real" if it is photographed in the same tiny part of the EM spectrum that our eyes are sensitive to (at least what our brains tell us our eyes are actually seeing).

But then...I suppose there is a "tactile element" that makes us want to know how an object would appear to our eyes...first hand through the visor of a spacesuit.
Isn't it a pity, though, that we would never "see" some of the most interesting and beautiful objects out there if we so limited ourselves? How dull the universe is between 400nm and 700nm!

Post Reply