t00fri wrote: deepsky.dsc is processed completely automatically, since I can hardly inspect in person all 10000+ sets of galaxy data. In the course of this process, the computer attaches always the label '# distance uncertain!' if the distance is NOT given in any of the 10 catalogs that I used by means of an ACCURATE method. Then a truely uncertain method must be used that can easily be wrong by a factor of two, say. Fortunately, meanwhile the number of such remaining cases has become really small.
Fridger, I cannot understand why everything that is told about your work (that’s precious, and I’m very serious saying this) is always interpreted by you as a personal offense.
I never told that ALL the deepsky.dsc data are wrong, I’m only saying that for the seven galaxy groups I tested
(yes, we are speaking of seven, I repeat, SEVEN, not 10000!), there is a relevant distance error (2.5x in my example).
This obviously is not your fault, but anyway the problem exists, and is big.
So, instead of explaining us how clever you have been to automatically process completely the huge quantity of data taken from a huge quantity of datasets (we know this very well, given the incredible number of times you reminded us of this), it was perhaps better to say:
“OK, you are right, probably these distances are wrong, so, thank you, as I’ll have a bit of time I’ll try to check them.”That would have been a polite reply, not the rude, aggressive, self-conceited one you gave here.
t00fri wrote: Since I can hardly test
automatically by computer,
whether any two galaxies are colliding, that label of caution is indeed justified from within MY ANALYSIS. If you have the time and devotion you can adjust by hand the hundreds of colliding galaxy distances in deepsky.dsc, of course. But which one of the two distances would you want to modify?
![Wink ;-)](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
.
The uncertain one, obviously, since the other one is certain and the galaxies are colliding.
Perhaps this is not the scientific way, but it’s surely a practical and logical way.
t00fri wrote: I ONLY use published, peer reviewed values of distances and thus would never change such values by hand due to some kind of personal prejudice that comes from outside the 10 used renowned galaxy catalogs.
So for you pointing out a probable error is:
"some kind of personal prejudice that comes from outside the 10 used renowned galaxy catalogs"?
Wow!
This is megalomania!
t00fri wrote:Transparent documentation in science is a most crucial request.All my deepsky.dsc files have a unique processing date AND version attached. I use
# Adapted for Celestia with Perl script: deepsky.pl Revision: 1.50
# Processed 2007-5-18 5 137 0 18:10:24 UTC
which is the current one. There were NO changes recently. Your data for NGC 6050A,B are IDENTICAL to what I used.
Given that some distances can be somewhat uncertain/incorrect ( a factor 2, say), one can compensate a bit for this by zooming in/out the angle of view with SHIFT+ mouse_Left movements ("telescope effect, telephoto lens effect!). This makes uncertainties in the distance less apparent, but leaving the relative separation and orientations untouched. That's probably what you didn't exploit.
No, I didn’t, and still I don’t see why I should have done it, given that the data contained in deepsky.dsc are the most accurate possible available.
I only wish to see such galaxies as HST sees them from the Earth, and to do it I wouldn't need to zoom or move arount them.
BTW, who are the NASA and Hubble astronomers (scientists like you, correct?) that name the same galaxies whose we are speaking about as
“Colliding”?
How can collide galaxies with a distance 2.5 times bigger?
There is something wrong: or the galaxies are not colliding (hard to believe), or the distances are wrong..
t00fri wrote: But apart from this, I really would not know why you didn't get the correct views. I used the public code and data files, nothing special whatsoever. Some other users will certainly manage to reproduce my displayed results.
Fridger
I would equally like to see someone else obtaining the same results so, please, make the same test, just for sake of knowledge and to give an end to this thread.
Thank you
Andrea
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)