Harp's observations [1] are consistent with fundamental similarity across the scales of the universe.
"Evidence that companion galaxies are located along the minor axes of large disk galaxies is reviewed. It is reported here that quasars also tend to be preferentially aligned along the minor axes of active disk galaxies. Empirically there is a continuity of physical properties which suggests that the intrinsic redshifts of quasars decay as they evolve into more normal galaxies. The coincident alignment of companion galaxies plus their systematically higher redshifts then both become confirmation of their evolution from quasars which have been previously ejected along the minor axes of active spiral galaxies. The quantization of the redshifts of companions also supports their evolutionary origin from the quantized, intrinsic, quasar redshifts. [1]"
1.
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/journ...36745/36745.pdf
Matter in form of polar wind lives planets along their minor axes. If Arp is right then there should be companion stars ejected from the much larger one. Are there any?
I wonder how one can argue against the fundamental similarity across the scales of
the universe, which very frequently observed and explained in Savov's theory of interaction and.