Bill Keel did an extensive study of the optical depth of the arms of (bright, big) spiral galaxies, using some pretty clever methods.
He concluded, in a series of papers on this topic, that it is rare to find any part of any arm of a spiral that has an optical depth of >1.
Too bad you didn't see fit to provide us with a link to those papers. But that's ok ... I found Keel's papers. And now I know why you didn't. Because they show you either misinterpreted Keel's conclusions or you are misrepresenting them.
The story starts with the findings of Edwin Valentijn back in 1990:
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1200/is_n2_v138/ai_9221687 "Casting shadows on spiral galaxies, Science News, *July 14, 1990 *by Ivars Peterson ... Reporting in the July 12 NATURE, Edwin A. Valentijn of the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute in Groningen, the Netherlands, suggests that major parts of most spiral galaxies are heavily clogged with light-absorbing dust.
In many cases, the dust enshrouding the inner parts of a galaxy appears so thick that astronomers actually see only the outer crust of stars. ... snip ... The old view that spiral galaxies are largely transparent arose from studies of how the average surface brightness of galaxies differs depending on whether an observer sees a galaxy face-on or tipped at an angle. Dust-free, transparent galaxies would have comparable luminosities when viewed from any direction, whereas dust-clogged galaxies would look brightest observed face-on. Valentijn originally set out to determine what factors may have biased the original studies of spiral-galaxy transparency. His precise measurements of the brightness of more than 12,000 carefully selected spiral galaxies revealed that these galaxies appear much more opaque than earlier studies had indicated. "I was very surprised because the results contradicted many famous papers in this area," Valentijn says."
In 1998, William Keel and Raymond White published this:
http://www.astr.ua.edu/keel/research/aasdust.html "COSMIC SILHOUETTES GIVE RARE GLIMPSE OF GALAXIES' DUST ... snip ... The investigators presented images ... snip ... of two striking pairs of galaxies, each with a spiral galaxy in front of a smooth elliptical companion. ... snip ... the astronomers did see what they expected to find, that the dust is patchy and clumped, largely aligned along the spiral arms. "Having most of the absorbing dust in the spiral arms, where most of the light originates, is what caused the statistical studies to wrongly conclude that spirals are opaque," says White." And while that report states "The dustiest patches that appear in the HST images aren't very dark, since at least 20% of the blue light comes through, and even more of the near-infrared light," the foreground galaxy has little similarity to the NGC 7319. NGC 7319 looks like this:
http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/graphics/images/2004/spiralgalaxy.new.gif
The foreground galaxies (AM1316-241 and AM0500-620) studied in this paper look like this:
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/9801/am1316_hst.jpg
and
http://www.smv.org/hastings/350kbg.jpg
As you can see, they weren't looking through material anywhere near the core of the foreground galaxies.
In fact, this Keel paper goes on to say "
These galaxy pairs only tell us about their outer regions, where the backlighting is strongest; the inner parts of galaxies, richest in heavy chemical elements and perhaps in dust, are much more difficult to explore."
Now of course, the series of papers you were probably refering to are the ones titled "SEEING GALAXIES THROUGH THICK AND THIN", of which this is the first paper:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/resolve?ApJ35086PDF "SEEING GALAXIES THROUGH THICK AND THIN. I. OPTICAL OPACITY MEASURES IN OVERLAPPING GALAXIES, Raymond E. White III, William C. Keel and Christopher J. Conselice, THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 542: 761-778, 2000 October 20" .
And here is what this paper actually says about opacity:
"Even though typical spirals are not optically thick throughout their disks, where they are optically thick is correlated with where they are most luminous: in spiral arms and inner disks. This correlation between absorption and emission regions may account for their apparent surface brightness being only mildly dependent on inclination, erroneously indicating that spirals are generally optically thick. (BAC - DRD, this last statement is what Keel et. al. were actually arguing against, not your claim that spiral arms are not optically deep.) Taken as an ensemble, the opacities of spiral galaxies may be just great enough to significantly affect QSO counts, though not enough to cause their high redshift cutoff. ... snip ... In the following discussion of individual objects, we will tend to quote magnitudes of extinction A rather than optical depths Tau, where A = 1.086Tau. ... snip ... As reported in White & Keel (1992), our best case thus far is AM1316-241, an Arp-Madore catalog object consisting of a foreground Sbc projected against a background elliptical. ... snip ... The opacity is clearly concentrated in the spiral arm, while the interarm region is nearly transparent. ... snip ... The E/Sbc pair AM 0500-620 shares some of the favorable characteristics of AM 1316-241 — it is comprised of a relatively undisturbed foreground spiral and a symmetric background elliptical ... snip ... along the arm ridge line, we find AB > 3.0 and AI = 2.1, while the interarm extinction ranges over AB = 0.1 - 0.6 and AI = 0 - 0.7 at various points seen against the elliptical ... snip ... The Sbc pair NGC 4567/8 (UGC 7777/6) is another case where the analysis is limited by the general lack of symmetry ... snip ... Here we concentrate on the dark lane in the upper left of Fig. 5a which cuts across a brighter background galaxy arm. ... snip ... We calculate face-on extinctions of AB = 1.1 and AI = 0.69 for this region ... snip ... This somewhat strengthens our interpretation of the excess light as indeed shining through a more transparent interarm medium. ... snip ... UGC 2942/3 This is a pair of highly-inclined spirals, with the background galaxy seen only a few degrees from edge-on ... snip ... To estimate the extinction in the foreground spiral UGC 2942, we consider intensity slices perpendicular to the projected plane of the background galaxy UGC 2943. ... snip ... The implied optical depth across the spiral arm (within the dust lane) is of order TauB = 3. ... snip ... NGC 3314 NGC 3314, a remarkable superposition of two spirals in the Hydra cluster (Abell 1060), was considered in the context of opacity measurements by Keel (1983). ... snip ... this system is uniquely valuable because we can estimate extinctions in the foreground galaxy closer to its center than in any other of our sample. ... snip ... The best places for reliable extinction measurements are the points where the arms of NGC 3314a cross the disk edges of NGC 3314b, going from projection against the bright disk to projection against almost blank space at essentially the same radial distance for the arm. We measured the arm intensities at adjacent points on and off the background disk, after subtracted a minimal exponential-disk model to flatten most of the background gradient (so that interpolation to get the relevant unobscured background intensity is better constrained). For two locations where the arms cross the disk at about 0.5R25, both AB and AI are comparable at 1.8, while the interarm regions average AB = 0.60 and AI = 0.34. ... snip ... Summary and Discussion We have presented absolute extinction measures for 11 spiral galaxies in overlapping pairs. For each pair, there is some range of radii for which we can measure the residual intensity of background light transmitted through the foreground disk. We translate these measures into arm and interarm extinctions (where such a distinction is possible) in both B and I bands. In almost all cases, there is a large difference between arm and interarm values. In arm regions, AB ~ 0.3 - 2 and AI ~ 0.15 - 1.4[/b], while in interarm regions, AB ~ 0.07 - 1.4 and AI ~ 0.05 - 1.3. ... snip ... The arm and interarm plots are drawn to the same scale to emphasize that arm regions tend to be much more opaque than interarm regions. ... snip ... The interarm (“disk”) extinction tends to decline with radius (Fig. 12b) from AB values of only ~ 1 magnitude within ~ 0.3R25 . In contrast, spiral arms and resonance rings can be optically thick at almost any galactocentric radius. ... snip ... Our initial results on AM1316-241 (White & Keel 1992) led us to conclude that disk opacity is concentrated in spiral arms and that interarm regions are fairly transparent. Our newer work is generally consistent with this picture, with resonance rings found to be as optically thick as spiral arms. Therefore, the distribution of absorption tends to be spatially correlated with particularly bright regions, since spiral arms are brighter than interarm regions. We suggested (White & Keel 1992) that this spatial correlation between internal extinction and emission may account for the statistical results reported in earlier studies — that surface brightness is roughly independent of inclination. The dust is optimally placed to affect global blue photometric properties, since typically half the disk light comes from only about 20% of its area, accounting for the rather flat inclination-surface brightness relation, without requiring galaxies to be optically thick in interarm regions. ... snip ... Since our measurements are based on spatially averaged transmission values, the “effective” extinction may not be fully comparable to the extinction curves derived from what are essentially point sources in our own and nearby galaxies. ... snip ... Our results bear on the question of whether the high-redshift “QSO cutoff” can be produced by absorption in spirals along the line of sight. ... snip ... For a fiducial set of spiral galaxy parameters, Ostriker & Heisler (1984) estimate that 50% of QSOs at z = 4.5 will suffer such obscuration by foreground galaxies; this is close enough to the characteristic peak redshift in the QSO distribution at z ~ 2.2 to make obscuration effects worth investigating. We find that disks are optically thin in spiral types Sb and later, which have AB < 1 from 0.5 to 0.9 R25; extinctions are below our measurement errors for R > R25. The typical interarm behavior of our sample is very close to the model adopted by Ostriker & Heisler (1984), except that we find extinctions (at B) less than they assume by factors always greater than 2. Their fiducial model is based on the radial structure of the Milky Way and the integrated extinction perpendicular to its disk at the solar location R ... snip ... This implies that the Ostriker & Heisler model has AB = 0.9 at 0.5R25, in contrast to the AB = 0.1-0.4 values we find for interarm regions at similar radii. Spiral arms will provide additional absorption, but they cover rather less than half the surface area in grand-design spiral disks. The covering fraction of spiral arms tends to be larger in flocculent spiral galaxies, however. ... snip ... While detailed calculations of this effect based on local galaxies may not be relevant to the high-z objects responsible for most of the cumulative extinction, we do note that a two-component model treating arm and interarm regions separately should reflect local reality much better than a single-zone scheme ; most spiral arms are opaque enough to drop a QSO out of observed samples, but the half (or more) of a disk between dusty arms remains usefully transparent over much of the disk's projected area..
And in case you missed what is stated by Keel above, the magnitude of extinction, A, equals 1.086 times the optical depth. Thus, if A > 1.086, the optical depth is greater than 1. So numerous examples are provided above where in the arms of the spirals the optical depth is greater than 1, even much greater than one. And based on the number of such examples in the above paper out of all the cases it examines, one would have to conclude finding optical depths greater than 1 in the arms of spirals near the core is NOT a rare thing at all. So you see, DRD, they did not conclude what you claim they did. If fact, I don't think you even read the paper. Is that how you typically conduct your research? Or were you just too busy working on your study of trolls and their effect on thread length to read it?
And note that the case they said was "
uniquely valuable because we can estimate extinctions in the foreground galaxy closer to its center than in any other of our sample. looks like this:
http://www.utahskies.org/image_library/deepsky/ngc/ngc3314.jpg
That foreground galaxy doesn't look anywhere near as dense as NGC 7319. I think you're hand-waving, DVD.
And here's what the fourth paper in Keel's series says:
http://www.astr.ua.edu/preprints/keel/index.html "Seeing Galaxies through Thick and Thin. IV. The Superimposed Spiral Galaxies of NGC 3314 by William C. Keel and Raymond E. White III, in press in the Astronomical Journal for September 2001." ... snip ... "
Using a larger sample of 12 suitable backlit spirals, White, Keep, & Conselice (2000; WKC) found this to be representative behavior: arms and resonance rings can have substantial opacities (TauB at any radius ... snip ...
In the innermost few hundred pc, even the most transparent regions between dust lanes show AB ~ 7 and there are dusty arms with AB > 8.2. "
Again, remember that A > 1.086 is an optical depth of 1.0, so it appears the arms near the core of spirals can be VERY opaque.
The Einstein Cross, or QSO 2237+0305, is a background quasar lensed by a foreground galaxy ... and it is 'seen' right through the densest part of ZW 2237+030.
Let's just show folks what that "supposed" foreground galaxy looks like in this case, shall we?
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/0703/qso2237_wiyn.jpg
And note that the 4 components of the Cross are reportedly separated by 0.9 arc seconds. That compares to a separation of the NGC 7319 quasar from the core of 8 arc seconds. So the entire galaxy you see in your example has about the apparent radius of the distance from the nucleus of NGC 7319 to its quasar.
By the way, Arp claims that the Hubble Space Telescope images show connecting material between one of the quasars (D) and the central galaxy and a high redshift connection has also been discovered between quasars A and B, passing in front of the connection between the nucleus and quasar D. Plus, the brightness of the four quasars was observed to increase over a period of several years from 1991 to 1994. Arp's explanation is that the galaxy has ejected four quasars, which are growing brighter with age as they move farther from the nucleus.
And here's a paper,
http://vela.astro.ulg.ac.be/themes/dataproc/deconv/articles/q2237/q2237.html#len , that concludes one quasar image's light is being absorbed and reradiated by dust ... which might be the case if the quasars are actually separate objects embedded in the host galaxy but unlikely in a lensing case. Chandra observations also indicate that object A has a broad emission line in the Fe/K alpha while objects B,C,D do not. How can this be with a single lensing galaxy? Afterall, according to NASA (
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/1995/43/text/ ), "it is impossible to identify the true gravitational lenses without observations which show the two objects have exactly the same spectral fingerprint and so are "multiple" images of a single object." Apparently, these don't.
Do you mind if I ask you how you go about evaluating the thousands of papers, written by hundreds (or more) of other astronomers, who find that quasars are at distances implied by their redshifts (per the Hubble relationship)?
Funny how these hundreds of astronomers have nothing to say in the case of NGC 7319. The silence is deafening.
