Tympanis.htm

GIMBLE IN A HIGH SIDEWALL ARM OF NGC 4603

"This nifty little goodie is definately organic, that is to say, definately physics engineered with articulate properties. Very similar has been called a woodtick in the Antennae colliding galaxies".



"A small scythe's vertical zoom horizon looms nearby".

GIMBLE,   GOING FOR A RIDE ON THE SURFACE OF AN ARM IN NGC 4603

IN NGC 4603 A TINY SPINNING TOP IS PERFECTLY FORMED

"Gimble partially submerged, a rudimentary scythe straight to its left. Standard galaxy arm structure in narrow rectangular blocks running short lengths, smooth surfaces".



"It looks similar in basic design (spinning top) to a large gimble at the edge of the Ngc 4603 main body, against a dust bank of shut down galaxy material. You'll see it in the next image coming up on the giant wall".

IN NGC 4603 A TINY GIMBLE DRIFTING ALONG IN CHAOTIC ARMS

"Gimbles are a generic name for cyclonnic swirls and other devices for instance versions which look like spinning tops, and versions which look like barbells with extreme short narrow shafts between".

AT NGC 4603 - M64 - INTEGRAL ARM DISAPPEARS INTO A FIREWALL

"Unseen polarity pole charged mass is behind, unseen, revealed by the integral arm".













GIMBLE,   WEARING A COAT OF DUST,   ADHESED ON THE SIDE OF NGC 4603













M64 - THE SLEEPING BEAUTY ALSO CALLED THE BLACKEYE GALAXY

Tympanis.htm

"For decades it was only known by a very bright inner area edged by a near black clamshell, because M64 is literally buried in dust, and another galaxy is just behind the curtain, linked to M64 by a plugged in integral arm ".

"Striations show that major collisions have occured in the past, none fatal".

"Razor edge disk where a major arm surge erupts out of the deep body of M64".











"The arms in the backside, that wind up over the top, each arm is progressively further back, in doppler expansion along the central ecliptic pole radial of the galaxy. As they progress backward they also expand outward, increasing in size of arc section. This type of progression is identical to gravity doppler wave progressions seen in the eastern bullseye of andromeda. These galaxy dopple arms are like currents winding around a magnetic strand.

"Andromeda's eastern gravity doppler display known as the bullseye. The east side doppler arms are expanding forward as they progress in size, the reverse of the expansion direction of M64's doppler arms".







"If the small blue zog sticking up (bends clockwise) is the end rod of a core pole, it means there could be a black hole core hidden inside the entropy residue. I am theorizing that zogs are the ends of core poles whose axis travel in straight lines through a galaxy and stick out into the open".

"How shutdowns of a galaxy can occur is easy enough. Galaxies have charge, some excessed in positive, some in negative charge. A negative galaxy comes romping along with so many pounds of negative charge and runs into a postive galaxy with many more pounds of positive charge, which robs the first galaxy of all of its negative binding power leaving an overplus of amourphos positively charged material. The overplus has no glow, no heat, no doppler arms, but has an enourmous mutli machine engineer tympani formation nubbing out the western blunt".

"The other galaxy still exists, lurked behind M64. The shut down galaxy named Lurk is dull, heatless, robbed of its seek engine's chaos. It is a residual".







"Residual shut down galaxy beneath andromeda".





"Striations in andromeda".



"Core pole sticking out of andromeda".

"There are two trails into the core, the right trail skirts the right core and is associated with emerging M110. The left trail goes into the core and is assumed associated with a pole at the core".







Click google logo for site search
  Click for site search