From: Archimedes Plutonium on


Chapter 4
Subject: chapt 14; third layer (0.01 < z < 0.02); solid-body-
rotation?


--- quoting from ---
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/jarrett/papers/LSS/


The third layer (0.01 < z < 0.02) is dominated by the P-P
supercluster
(left side of image) and the P-I supercluster extending up into the
ZoA terminating as the Great Attractor region (notably Abell 3627)
disappears behind a wall of Milky Way stars. An intriguing "ring" or
chain of galaxies seems to circle/extend from the northern to the
southern Galactic hemisphere (see also  Figure 1). It is unknown
whether this ring-like structure is physically associated with the
cosmic web or an artifact of projection.
--- end quoting ---


So is the above ring an example of solid-body-rotation?


The globular clusters wherein solid-body-rotation was discovered,
where they found
in that ring above?


If so, I would imagine that in future mappings of the galaxies that
each picture frame would
have ring structures.

Chapter 4 Missing Mass
Subject: is the Great Wall or Sloan have solid body rotation?


On Aug 8, 2:50=A0am, Archimedes Plutonium
<plutonium.archime...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Here is a paragraph I wrote in the 2nd edition of this
> book:
>
> Cosmic Missing Mass Conundrum starts with astronomers
> of the 20th century observing and recording the motion of
> globular clusters and other astronomical objects in that they
> possessed Solid Body Rotation. But this Solid Body Rotation
> can have a Missing Mass Problem of anywhere from 70%
> missing mass to that of 99% missing mass.
>
> --- end quoting a 2nd edition discussion of solid body rotation ---

I do not know if the Great Wall or Sloan Great Wall are some of those
globular clusters.
If they are in those Walls, would pretty much indicate closeness or
nearness to the
Nucleus of the Atom Totality.


Archimedes Plutonium
http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies