Galaxy Zoo Talk
The 2 central ellipsoid galaxies may merge relatively soon since they seem very close to each other. Have no idea what the blue things are!
3 central objects (incl arc) form irregular family 2 larger blue object 2nd family. 7 very small blue,red,gray objects 3rd (up to 10th) fam.
The more distant and fuzzier small ellipsoid object may orbit or be on merging path with left of central galaxy. 2 blue objects much closer.
MAY INSTEAD CLASSIFY AS FLAT ELLIPSE WITH RING AROUND CENTRAL BULGE CORE. This photo fits either classification.
VERY BIZARRE ORTHOGONALLY CROSSHATCHED BRIGHT BLUE SPHEROID in 8-o'clock position to central object. One can see tiny squares (artifacts?)
A great many apparent satellites: I.count 5 satellites, 2 of which are bright blue spherical objects. If equidistant, may orbit or merge.
Bright object has small 8-o'clock irregular and a dim further out 10-o'clock irregular object. The 7-o'clock blue object looks much closer.
3 objects near center. Maybe a 3-member bound local elliptical galaxy group. May eventually merge or just orbit.
Object seems to have nearby relatively tiny deep red satellite galaxy in 7-o'clock position; also distant larger irregular 8-oclock object.
Appears as galaxy supercluster core with many relatively proximal elliptical, old, galaxies. One blue-white central objject has shell layer
Small spherical object in 8-o'clock position from the core of galaxy-to-classify. May be gravitationally bound.
Perhaps nearby spherical objects form a galactic local group and orbit the galaxy-to-classify (just a guess).
In the 10-o'clock position from the galaxy-to-classify is a small bright blue spherical object. NEEDS FOLLOWUP INVESTIGATION.
Vivid, acutely sharp and large central core.
Highly defined center; poorly defined periphery. Makes overall shape determination difficult to classify.
Either elliptical with central bulge or spiral. Cannot tell which, from given image.
All classification for left object (probably elliptical). Right object seems closer, relatively large central bulge, elliptical, luminous!
Right side appears dimmer than left side. Clear central bulge. Probably elliptical.
Of the 4 clumps, the 3 most central clumps appear larger than 4th (leftmost) clump. Leftmost clump may be at end of spiral arm. Lensing?
The two central galaxies appear as a cluster pair or pre-merging pair, if equidistant from us. #Galaxyzoo
Edge on central bulge truncated at lower left corner. Possible tidal tail or irregularity from image center curving off center-left.
Larger, central galaxy demonstrates large central bulge but very faint, poorly resolved spiral arms. #Galaxyzoo
The 2 central ellipsoid galaxies may merge relatively soon since they seem very close to each other. Have no idea what the blue things are!
3 central objects (incl arc) form irregular family 2 larger blue object 2nd family. 7 very small blue,red,gray objects 3rd (up to 10th) fam.
The more distant and fuzzier small ellipsoid object may orbit or be on merging path with left of central galaxy. 2 blue objects much closer.
MAY INSTEAD CLASSIFY AS FLAT ELLIPSE WITH RING AROUND CENTRAL BULGE CORE. This photo fits either classification.
VERY BIZARRE ORTHOGONALLY CROSSHATCHED BRIGHT BLUE SPHEROID in 8-o'clock position to central object. One can see tiny squares (artifacts?)
A great many apparent satellites: I.count 5 satellites, 2 of which are bright blue spherical objects. If equidistant, may orbit or merge.
Bright object has small 8-o'clock irregular and a dim further out 10-o'clock irregular object. The 7-o'clock blue object looks much closer.
3 objects near center. Maybe a 3-member bound local elliptical galaxy group. May eventually merge or just orbit.
Object seems to have nearby relatively tiny deep red satellite galaxy in 7-o'clock position; also distant larger irregular 8-oclock object.
Appears as galaxy supercluster core with many relatively proximal elliptical, old, galaxies. One blue-white central objject has shell layer
Small spherical object in 8-o'clock position from the core of galaxy-to-classify. May be gravitationally bound.
Perhaps nearby spherical objects form a galactic local group and orbit the galaxy-to-classify (just a guess).
In the 10-o'clock position from the galaxy-to-classify is a small bright blue spherical object. NEEDS FOLLOWUP INVESTIGATION.
Vivid, acutely sharp and large central core.
Highly defined center; poorly defined periphery. Makes overall shape determination difficult to classify.
Either elliptical with central bulge or spiral. Cannot tell which, from given image.
All classification for left object (probably elliptical). Right object seems closer, relatively large central bulge, elliptical, luminous!
Right side appears dimmer than left side. Clear central bulge. Probably elliptical.
Of the 4 clumps, the 3 most central clumps appear larger than 4th (leftmost) clump. Leftmost clump may be at end of spiral arm. Lensing?
The two central galaxies appear as a cluster pair or pre-merging pair, if equidistant from us. #Galaxyzoo
Edge on central bulge truncated at lower left corner. Possible tidal tail or irregularity from image center curving off center-left.
Larger, central galaxy demonstrates large central bulge but very faint, poorly resolved spiral arms. #Galaxyzoo