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Editor’s Note: Dr. Sulentic will in Mexico
City and Baja, California, from Oct. 8-16. He will be checking
e-mail daily and looks forward to talking to the media about
this subject. On Oct. 8 and 9 he can be reached at the Institute
of Astronomy, UNAM, Mexico City, 525/622-3908 or 525/616-1312 as
the guest of Dr. Margarita Rosado. After that, e-mail is the
best means of contact.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Dr. Jack Sulentic, a professor of
astronomy at The University of Alabama, says a release from the
Hubble Heritage incorrectly reports that there is no bridge
between the famous galaxy-quasar pair NGC4319-Markarian 205.
Hubble (Space Telescope) Heritage is an organization
connected with the Space Telescope Science Institute, and made
its release on Oct. 3 http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/
PR/2002/23/index.html.
In 1983, Sulentic reported that both NGC4319 and Markarian
205 were connected, which supported a claim presented in 1972 by
astronomer H.C. Arp at the Max Planck Institut fur Astrophysik,
Munich, Germany.
At the time Sulentic said that “during the past 10 years,
many astronomers have argued that Arp’s data had to be either
incorrect or due to something other than a physical connection,
since the redshift-implied distances of both objects are
significantly different.”
Through image enhancement and analysis, Sulentic directly
confirmed Arp’s findings of a luminous connection between the
two. His evidence was based on processing Arp’s Palomar and
Kitt Peak telescope images.
Sulentic performed his study at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena, Calif., during a 1982 NASA summer faculty
fellowship.
At the time two alternate explanations for the connection had
been proposed: a foreground star or background galaxy located
between galaxy NGC4319 and the Markarian 205 quasar giving the
appearance of a connection or, the fuzzy edges of the two
objects overlap when viewed through the telescopes.
Sulentic analyzed the light distribution in the area between
the quasar and the galaxy and showed mathematically that neither
theory was possible.
He stands by his finding. “The release tells us that the
most recent Hubble Space Telescope images of this system do not
show a connection. The papers H. Arp and I wrote have never been
refuted in scientific literature. Did we make a mistake no one
told us about?”
He says that a quick glance at the HST composite image
reveals that the image of the galaxy-quasar pair is presented in
a way that emphasizes the brightest parts of the galaxy and the
quasar so that the impression is given that there is no light
between the two objects.
“Our work showed that the connection was of low surface
brightness,” he says. “In order to see it one would have to
“burn out” the bright parts of the image and emphasize the
fainter light levels. Technically speaking, the dynamic range in
the image is so great that one cannot see all light levels at
the same time.”
However, he says the Hubble picture actually does show the
luminous connection on the web image by increasing the contrast
at fainter levels.
“You can see the narrow core in the connection, which HST
is able to detect because of its excellent resolution,”
Sulentic says. “It is seen exactly where we found it in the
earlier studies. Using the HST Heritage web data one can quickly
show different versions of the image where the connection is
visible. The pictures shown here clearly reveal the connection
at low surface brightness levels that should enable readers to
form their own judgment. Hubble Space Telescope has in fact,
confirmed the earlier work.”
He says there are two independent questions on this issue.
The first is does a luminous connection exist? And secondly, if
a connection exists, what does it mean? Sulentic says the answer
to the first question is yes.
But that opens the possibility, however remote, that the
redshift of at least one of these objects is not telling us the
correct distance (Quasars, Redshifts and Controversies H. Arp).
“There may be other less controversial interpretations as
well, but even the possibility of the former may be inadmissible
to some astronomers,” he says.
Sulentic teaches in the department
of physics and astronomy in the College
of Arts and Sciences. The College of Arts and Sciences is
UA’s largest division and the largest public liberal arts
college in the state, with approximately 5,000 undergraduate and
1,000 graduate students. The College has received national
recognition for academic excellence, and A&S students have
been selected for many of the nation’s top academic honors,
including 15 Rhodes Scholarships, 13 Goldwater Scholarships,
seven Truman Scholarships and 11 memberships on USA Today’s
Academic All-American teams.
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