WATCH-MAN wrote:
Boeing 757 wrote:Well that is obviously pointless, since without the EU books which gave us specific numbers, we can not come to an accurate number for you.
- That would mean that there is no evidence.
Boeing 757 wrote:What we do know from available canon sources is that the SW Galaxy is a spiral galaxy, and it has companion dwarf spiral-galaxies in orbit about itself.
- It's like in a kindergarten. One has to say the same thing again and again as nobody is able to listen to what was said to another.
Do you have any evidence for this claim?
And please consider what was already said in the very first post of this thread and in all other posts; all the arguments and objections in this thread.

Yeah, the computer display that Obi-Wan refers to in AOTC. The implications of it strongly hint that said objects are not a part of the SW Galaxy itself, that they are divisible astronomical bodies.
I will not answer you again if you merely repeat what others have already said and thus force me to repeat my objections again.[/list]
I am not repeating anything, and they are my own thoughts. I have read bits and pieces of replies, but I legitimately do not have the time to gloss over every person's reply in such a huge thread like this, given that I have been traveling constantly this week alone. Feel free not to reply, I don't care since you seem to have a weird obsession with this topic, for whatever your ulterior motive is....
Boeing 757 wrote:That means that it could be far bigger than the Milky Way (that could range upwards to 200,000 lightyears or 500,000 lightyears in diameter), equal in size to the Milky Way or perhaps smaller (50,000 lightyears or so).
- Or it could have a diameter of less than 5 kpc - as there are spiral galaxies that are so small.
Or it could be no spiral galaxy at all. It could be an elliptical galaxy or an irregular galaxy.
Are you kidding me?

Even if you question the validity of the object in ESB being the GFFA, the library display in AOTC CLEARLY highlights that the SW Galaxy is in fact a spiral galaxy....
And I want to state plainly here, I can care less whether it be an elliptical or irregular galaxy. It is what it is, pal--and it looks to be a spiral. I hope though that you do understand if it should be an elliptical galaxy, that the underlying implications of that likely signifies that the SW Galaxy is much larger than the Milky Way, that the speed of hyperdrive will likely need to be increased, that the number of systems inhabited is potentially higher and certainly the number of ships needed to police all that space will range into the tens millions without a doubt....
Boeing 757 wrote:Ideally, I would say that it is on par to the Milky Way to be fair.
- And this shows a blatant bias.
Why not look at the objective evidence and form then an opinion.
Why not admitting that there are things we simply do not know.
That wouldn't make the Star Wars galaxy small or big.
It would simply mean that we do not know much about its morphology or dimension.
Really, BIAS? Everyone in this thread has conceded that there are no official figures on the size of the SW Galaxy. Pegging the size to be equal with the Milky Way is being fair, I believe. It is not either too small or too big when the scale of most galaxies is considered. If it is 80000 lightyears in diameter instead of 100,000 LY, who the hell cares?
Seriously, dude. I really do suspect that you have an ulterior motive in this thread, one that fits your pro-Trek agenda.
Boeing 757 wrote:And my guess is that you are so keen to make it out far smaller than the Milky Way so that the speed of hyperdrive can be lowered to that of ST warp drive. Just a guess....
- There is a saying: What I'm willing to do myself, I wouldn't put past others.
You have shown your bias above.
Maybe your goal is to keep the Star Wars galaxy as large as the EU says it is so that the speed of hyper drive is not lowered.
That's why you are arguing that the Star Wars galaxy is at least as big as the Milky Way - whereas I'm arguing nothing but am only looking for objective evidence.
If the objective evidence supports the claim that the Star Wars galaxy is at least as big as the Milky Way, I can live with it.
If the objective evidence proves that the Star Wars galaxy is far smaller, I can live with it too.
It there is no objective evidence, I can live with the uncertainty too.
LOL! The Milky Way is not too big on the scale of what is termed large regarding galactic size in this universe. There are spirals out there that like Andromeda or M100 which are far bigger in regards to mass and diameter, and so forth. Which is why I believe that it is far to peg it at about the size of the Milky Way more or less...but even if it isn't, I am fine with the SW Galaxy being 50000 LY across like the Pinwheel Galaxy. Heck, why not make it 30000 LY in diameter. Still doesn't change the fact that hyperdrive is FAR faster than warp drive or that the Empire will WTF pwn fuck the Federation into oblivion.
Boeing 757 wrote:And in the audio commentary of TESB, it was stated that that object is the SW Galaxy.
- The audio commentary is overridden by the movie.
Boeing 757 wrote:The fact that it seems to spin too quickly, is purely a visual FX error,
- Now you ignore evidence you do not like.
With that argumentation we can dismiss all we are seeing in space as all is only FX.
Or are we cherry picking? What supports our view is admissible and what contradicts our view has to be an FX error?
Boeing 757 wrote:and may be reasonably be explained away by the fact that the Rebel fleet could have been maneuvering in space (which, it was seen doing so).
- Do you really understand what you are saying?
That would mean that the rebel fleet hat to move with billion times the speed of light.
Curtis Saxton has explained it: "the observed rotation would equate to rotational speeds on the rim reaching at least "the impossible velocity of 33 billion times the speed of light"."
Assuming that this is indeed a galaxy but it is not rotating as fast as seen, that the rebel fleet is moving around it, means, that the rebel fleet has to be as fast - and even fast as they are far far farther away from the rim.
FX screw-ups happen all the time in sci-fi. It was apparently the scriptwriters intent to portray the SW Galaxy itself at the end of ESB, but for whatever reason they made the object rotate too fast (they're not astronomers, obviously and do not care). Take for example ST IV where a Bird of Prey has a colossal size as it circles Earth's sun. It happens, unless you want to claim that BoPs have a wingspan as wide as Earth's diameter.... Yes, there are some good critiques that Saxton's page brings up though, which is good.
Boeing 757 wrote:The object appears too be a spiral galaxy
- Repeating a claim several times does not substitute the necessity to provide evidence.
Boeing 757 wrote:and the Millenium Falcon sets course towards it. Or are you going to claim that the MF was on course into a planetary nebula?
- Where is the problem?
Why not flying through a nebula - if it is a nebula?
Furthermore: Who says that the Millennium Falcon flew through whatever it is and not past it?
It could have gone anywhere. That's not a serious point in favor of it being the SW Galaxy that we saw.
Boeing 757 wrote:Then what else were the spiral galaxy-looking objects in orbit about the main one?
- 1. I have not claimed that the objects that appear to be a galaxy in the background is not al galaxy.
2. I have not seen any evidence that they are orbiting the galaxy that is depicted in the middle of the screen.
OK, then exactly pray tell are they? Nebulae of some kind of crucial galactic importance (LOL)? The first thing that came in my mind was that we were looking at the GFFA, and there happened to be two or three other smaller dwarf galaxies orbiting it. Seemingly, others have come to the same conclusion as well. If they are galaxies and not in any way paired with the GFFA, then that should mean that they are even further away from the SW Galaxy than satellite galaxies typically are from their partners which they orbit. Remember, Kamino is only twelve parsecs outside of the Rishi Maze....
Boeing 757 wrote:Obi-Wan was describing the location of Kamino on the digital screen [...]
- Yes - he was trying to describe the location of a star system on a screen depicting three galaxies.
Boeing 757 wrote:, and pointed to the galaxy-looking object while naming it the Rishi Maze.
- No
Please consider what was already said in the very first post of this thread and in all other posts; all the arguments and objections in this thread. I will not answer you again if you merely repeat what others have already said and thus force me to repeat my objections again.
This one time I will repeat what I had already written and what you should have considered:
WATCH-MAN wrote:It is not enough to show that from the perspective of the camera his finger was in front of what appears to be a galaxy in the background. You have to provide evidence that from his perspective, he was pointing to it, that if you would elongate his finger, the tip would touch the display exactly where the galaxy is.
and
WATCH-MAN wrote:
[...]
I can not see how far away his finger was from the display, where it would be when looked from the perspective of Obi Wan or where it would touch the display if the direction of the pointing finger is followed. As I have already said above, in the Wookipedia entry about Kamino in the chapter "Behind the scenes" they seem to think that Obi Wan pointed toward the Unknown Regions, where no known systems are located.
And watching the "zoom in" direction, it does not appear as it is zooming to somewhere at the edge of the galaxy but into the bulge of the galaxy.
Maybe someone could provide us with an image analysis which considers the typical problems of watching a three-dimensional event on a two-dimensional screen - especially if the seen computer display may be a 3D display, depicting a the three-dimensional map on a two-dimensional surface.
Otherwise I think we have to regard this scene as a non sequitur.
It does not proves that Kamino is outside of the Star Wars galaxy.
Please provide evidence.
It sounds like you're rambling on about irrelevant stuff here. Good lord, man, you sound like a robot or something... At this point, you're simply trolling.
Boeing 757 wrote:Kamino is stated to be located not too far away from the Rishi Maze, only a few parsecs outside (but still deemed to be part of the SW galaxy).
- Not knowing what the Rishi Maze is and where it is, that doesn't mean anything.
Without evidence that Obi Wan pointed to what appears to be a galaxy in the background, we have no evidence that this galaxy is supposed to be this Rishi Maze.
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Said objects appear to be satellite galaxies. You're making this FAR too complicated. Occam's Razor dictates that the simplest explanation is valid instead of whatever convoluted elaboration you hold in your mind.
And did we even watch the same film here? Obi-Wan points to said object, and names it the "Rishi Maze". WTF, man. Watch your own 'evidence'.