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Scientists think there may be a wormhole in the center of our galaxy

Started by COSMO, May 29, 2014, 12:55:03 PM

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COSMO

New article about this subject...coincidentally...

The Black Hole at the Beginning of Time --"We may have Emerged from a Black Hole in a Higher-Dimensional Universe"

The problem, as the authors see it, is that the big bang hypothesis has our relatively comprehensible, uniform, and predictable universe arising from the physics-destroying insanity of a singularity. It seems unlikely. So perhaps something else happened. Perhaps our universe was never singular in the first place.

Their suggestion: our known universe could be the three-dimensional "wrapping" around a four-dimensional black hole's event horizon. In this scenario, our universe burst into being when a star in a four-dimensional universe collapsed into a black hole.

In our three-dimensional universe, black holes have two-dimensional event horizons – that is, they are surrounded by a two-dimensional boundary that marks the "point of no return." In the case of a four-dimensional universe, a black hole would have a three-dimensional event horizon.

In their proposed scenario, our universe was never inside the singularity; rather, it came into being outside an event horizon, protected from the singularity. It originated as – and remains – just one feature in the imploded wreck of a four-dimensional star.

The researchers emphasize that this idea, though it may sound "absurd," is grounded firmly in the best modern mathematics describing space and time. Specifically, they've used the tools of holography to "turn the big bang into a cosmic mirage." Along the way, their model appears to address long-standing cosmological puzzles and – crucially – produce testable predictions.

Of course, our intuition tends to recoil at the idea that everything and everyone we know emerged from the event horizon of a single four-dimensional black hole. We have no concept of what a four-dimensional universe might look like. We don't know how a four-dimensional "parent" universe itself came to be.

But our fallible human intuitions, the researchers argue, evolved in a three-dimensional world that may only reveal shadows of reality.

They draw a parallel to Plato's allegory of the cave, in which prisoners spend their lives seeing only the flickering shadows cast by a fire on a cavern wall.

"Their shackles have prevented them from perceiving the true world, a realm with one additional dimension," they write. "Plato's prisoners didn't understand the powers behind the sun, just as we don't understand the four-dimensional bulk universe. But at least they knew where to look for answers."





http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2014/08/the-black-hole-at-the-beginning-of-time-we-may-have-emerged-from-a-black-hole-in-a-higher-dimensiona.html


It's a unipolar inductor...

It affects matter and modifies space time/ether...

Dave, I agree with the anu somewhat, but think that movement involves dimensional shifts...from distorted ether to placid ether...a "recycling" of the raw stuff of creation.  That, imho, is what is responsible for gravity.  Vortices, causing ether flow into subatomic black holes.  The ETHER is a super fluid after all...
It's the same pattern from subatomic to universal.  It's natures way and it's all around us.   

Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

Fruitbat

FWIW I read the thread title as:

"Scientists think there may be a womble in the center of our galaxy"
Made me look twice I can tell you!

FB.


COSMO

Quote from: Fruitbat on August 11, 2014, 05:44:39 PM
FWIW I read the thread title as:

"Scientists think there may be a womble in the center of our galaxy"
Made me look twice I can tell you!

FB.

Well yes, actually there IS a womble in the center of our galaxy!!!

See!?!?!?!?!



Here's some new results from NuSTAR...

Black hole bends light, space, time -- and NASA's NuSTAR can see it all unfold

NASA's black-hole hunting telescope has captured a cosmic battle between dark and light.
NuSTAR, formally known as the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, has observed a supermassive black hole's gravity tugging on X-ray light that's being emitted near that black hole.
NASA says \
NASA says "The regions around supermassive black holes shine brightly in X-rays. Some of this radiation comes from a surrounding disk, and most comes from the corona, pictured here as the white light at the base of a jet. This is one possible configuration for a corona -- its actual shape is unclear."
The mystery of black holes Black hole hunting satellite launched New telescope to illuminate black holes
That light is getting stretched and blurred, and researchers are getting to see it all in unprecedented detail, said NASA in a news release issued today.
In this instance, the corona -- a source of X-ray light that sits near a black hole -- recently collapsed in toward the black hole that's named Markarian 335.

The craft completed its primary mission earlier this year, and it was redirected to investigate Markarian 335 once scientists noticed that the black hole had become dramatically brighter. NuSTAR observed that Markarian 335's gravity sucked the corona's light, an illuminating action that NASA likened to someone shining a flashlight for astronomers.
Scientists can now see the corona "lighting up material around the black hole," which allows them to study "the most extreme light-bending effects" of Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, said NuSTAR's principal investigator, Fiona Harrison, in the news release. She is with the California Institute of Technology.
As if NuSTAR's observations and Einstein's theories aren't mind-boggling enough, NASA says the black hole Markarian 335 "spins so rapidly that space and time are dragged around with it."

http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/12/tech/black-hole-nasa-nustar/index.html

So here we have a cosmological unipolar inductor dragging space/time around with it. 



Here we have a man made unipolar inductor circuit...



Nature shows the way...

Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

A51Watcher


Littleenki

Im going to share something now that will likely be called a vision of a crackpot or madman, but Im OK with that because it is what I have come to realize....

Our universe is one segment of an infinite cycle, whereas ALL is created through these "Black holes" and annihilated through them in the perceived end of time....everything expands into a wonderous golden age near the center of this particular timeline, then compresses back through these "black holes" or wormholes, or what have you, to be recreated into another universe, such as the one we live in now.

These cycles are woven into each other, as a geometric fabric or mesh, whereas there is zero empty space, and everything is connected allowing for infinite possibilities of quantum mechanics.

Our version is likely nearing the end, maybe a few billion years more to go in a 15-20 billion year process, which is just a fractal version of smaller and larger events going on in infinite aeons of so called time. This is what I have seen in numerous dreams and meditations for years.

Simply put, our universe may be blinking in and out of multiple existences over vast lengths of "time"..a theory I had in one deep meditation years ago, which makes sense in some odd way..and at that blink (pinch point), we call it a singularity or black hole of sorts.

Like a soup being strained through a colander, wih new space coming through the other side, having to redensify its matter into mass again...and the number of holes in the colander are infinite, as are the possible outcomes of each new universe. The strained densities would be effectively recycled into fuel for electrical plasma, fusion, or fission products which provide an expansive force to regrow the new universe. This matter still goes through, albeit with great pressure and with a sudden bursting effect, which scientists call a big bang.

Each observed existence, to an outside observer, is like a curtain being pulled through a small ring, where everything compresses before the ring, and expands after the ring.

Just like this graphic you posted, Cosmo....but add more pinches..an infinite number to be exact.



The Blink, is an inductive arc, which also allows for creation of new matter and mass pulling from local geometry surrounding it, along with new lifeforms, and allows for various theories such as that of Accretion, or Stellar Metamorphosis to exist, providing those theories with an origin for their most miniscule beginnings as a nebula or cloud of spiralling matter into mass.

Everything is dust in the wind at some point....

The eventual assembly of these periods between blinks decides what time is.

And, the desire of mind which is always inherent, which humans so hamfistedly call God, is what brings various forms of matter together into specific unique densities within our perceived universe.

Kinda like a 4d printer in space! 8)

I knew I shouldve stayed in bed.... :o

Cheers!
Le
Hermetically sealed, for your protection

COSMO

Yes LE,

A fractal propagation of space/time bubbles, from the subatomic to the cosmic.

Like this:


Description here:

http://www.thelivingmoon.com/forum/index.php?topic=6666.msg97176#msg97176

The ETHER is a super fluid. 

Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

Littleenki

Quote from: COSMO on August 14, 2014, 02:23:49 PM
Yes LE,

A fractal propagation of space/time bubbles, from the subatomic to the cosmic.

Like this:


Description here:

http://www.thelivingmoon.com/forum/index.php?topic=6666.msg97176#msg97176

The ETHER is a super fluid. 

Cosmo

Whew, I thought youd say I was drinking superfluid when I realized my ideas there!LOL!

Total agreement there, Cosmo!

Like a bubble bath, I knew my mother was on to something when she drew that bath and made the bubbles I loved to play in as a boy! :D

Physics from the most unlikely source!

Cheers!
Le
Hermetically sealed, for your protection

PLAYSWITHMACHINES

Ooh, love those bubbles :D

QuoteOur version is likely nearing the end, maybe a few billion years more to go in a 15-20 billion year process, which is just a fractal version of smaller and larger events going on in infinite aeons of so called time. This is what I have seen in numerous dreams and meditations for years.

Like this?



The math doesn't lie, my freinds ;)

QuoteSimply put, our universe may be blinking in and out of multiple existences over vast lengths of "time"..a theory I had in one deep meditation years ago,

Mmm, for a long time, i have had the impression that this blinking into & out of existence is actually happening trillions of times a second, and if you could place yourself between those 'frames' you could be anywhere at all in the universe...

QuoteEach observed existence, to an outside observer, is like a curtain being pulled through a small ring, where everything compresses before the ring, and expands after the ring.

Yep.
Maybe it's a golden ring? ;)

COSMO

Like this?

Yes, beautiful Luke.  To me it is like a plant...a living thing, blossoming fractally.



Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

COSMO

No Big Bang? Quantum equation predicts universe has no beginning

"The Big Bang singularity is the most serious problem of general relativity because the laws of physics appear to break down there," Ahmed Farag Ali at Benha University and the Zewail City of Science and Technology, both in Egypt, told Phys.org.
Ali and coauthor Saurya Das at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta, Canada, have shown in a paper published in Physics Letters B that the Big Bang singularity can be resolved by their new model in which the universe has no beginning and no end.


The physicists emphasize that their quantum correction terms are not applied ad hoc in an attempt to specifically eliminate the Big Bang singularity. Their work is based on ideas by the theoretical physicist David Bohm, who is also known for his contributions to the philosophy of physics. Starting in the 1950s, Bohm explored replacing classical geodesics (the shortest path between two points on a curved surface) with quantum trajectories.
In their paper, Ali and Das applied these Bohmian trajectories to an equation developed in the 1950s by physicist Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri at Presidency University in Kolkata, India. Raychaudhuri was also Das's teacher when he was an undergraduate student of that institution in the '90s.

Using the quantum-corrected Raychaudhuri equation, Ali and Das derived quantum-corrected Friedmann equations, which describe the expansion and evolution of universe (including the Big Bang) within the context of general relativity. Although it's not a true theory of quantum gravity, the model does contain elements from both quantum theory and general relativity. Ali and Das also expect their results to hold even if and when a full theory of quantum gravity is formulated.
No singularities nor dark stuff
In addition to not predicting a Big Bang singularity, the new model does not predict a "big crunch" singularity, either. In general relativity, one possible fate of the universe is that it starts to shrink until it collapses in on itself in a big crunch and becomes an infinitely dense point once again.
Ali and Das explain in their paper that their model avoids singularities because of a key difference between classical geodesics and Bohmian trajectories. Classical geodesics eventually cross each other, and the points at which they converge are singularities. In contrast, Bohmian trajectories never cross each other, so singularities do not appear in the equations.
In cosmological terms, the scientists explain that the quantum corrections can be thought of as a cosmological constant term (without the need for dark energy) and a radiation term. These terms keep the universe at a finite size, and therefore give it an infinite age. The terms also make predictions that agree closely with current observations of the cosmological constant and density of the universe.
New gravity particle
In physical terms, the model describes the universe as being filled with a quantum fluid. The scientists propose that this fluid might be composed of gravitons—hypothetical massless particles that mediate the force of gravity. If they exist, gravitons are thought to play a key role in a theory of quantum gravity.
In a related paper, Das and another collaborator, Rajat Bhaduri of McMaster University, Canada, have lent further credence to this model. They show that gravitons can form a Bose-Einstein condensate (named after Einstein and another Indian physicist, Satyendranath Bose) at temperatures that were present in the universe at all epochs.
Motivated by the model's potential to resolve the Big Bang singularity and account for dark matter and dark energy, the physicists plan to analyze their model more rigorously in the future. Their future work includes redoing their study while taking into account small inhomogeneous and anisotropic perturbations, but they do not expect small perturbations to significantly affect the results.
"It is satisfying to note that such straightforward corrections can potentially resolve so many issues at once," Das said.




Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-02-big-quantum-equation-universe.html#jCp

I am pleased that this theory is based on Bohm's work.  Bohm and Krishnamurti were very good friends and discussed the nature of  consciousness and the quantum realm.  Wonderful stuff.

http://bohmkrishnamurti.com/

http://www.thelivingmoon.com/forum/index.php?topic=7064.msg98258#msg98258

And this part:

In physical terms, the model describes the universe as being filled with a quantum fluid. The scientists propose that this fluid might be composed of gravitons—hypothetical massless particles that mediate the force of gravity. If they exist, gravitons are thought to play a key role in a theory of quantum gravity.
In a related paper, Das and another collaborator, Rajat Bhaduri of McMaster University, Canada, have lent further credence to this model. They show that gravitons can form a Bose-Einstein condensate (named after Einstein and another Indian physicist, Satyendranath Bose) at temperatures that were present in the universe at all epochs.


Yes.  A Bose-Einstein condensate...a quantum superfluid!  The universe is a quantum ocean and all points in space and time are connected.  That's how it works. ;  )

Cosmo 



And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

COSMO

Scientists discover black hole so big it contradicts growth theory

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Scientists say they have discovered a black hole so big that it challenges the theory about how they grow.

Scientists said this black hole was formed about 900 million years after the Big Bang.

But with measurements indicating it is 12 billion times the size of the Sun, the black hole challenges a widely accepted hypothesis of growth rates.

"Based on previous research, this is the largest black hole found for that period of time," Dr Fuyan Bian, Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Australian National University (ANU), told Reuters on Wednesday.

"Current theory is for a limit to how fast a black hole can grow, but this black hole is too large for that theory."


http://news.yahoo.com/scientists-discover-black-hole-big-contradicts-growth-theory-182735953.html



Victor knew too.

http://www.dancingwithwater.com/the-new-science-of-water/vortices-natures-creative-tool/

The way of the universe is displayed all around us in nature.  It holds true at all scales, from subatomic to cosmic.  Imagine what that black hole has spawned form it's distortion of the ETHER.  Surely an amazing universe lies on the other side. 

Cosmo


And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

COSMO



The corrugated galaxy: Milky Way may be much larger than previously estimated



The Milky Way galaxy is at least 50 percent larger than is commonly estimated, according to new findings that reveal that the galactic disk is contoured into several concentric ripples. The research, conducted by an international team led by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Professor Heidi Jo Newberg, revisits astronomical data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey which, in 2002, established the presence of a bulging ring of stars beyond the known plane of the Milky Way.

"In essence, what we found is that the disk of the Milky Way isn't just a disk of stars in a flat plane -- it's corrugated," said Heidi Newberg, professor of physics, applied physics, and astronomy in the Rensselaer School of Science. "As it radiates outward from the sun, we see at least four ripples in the disk of the Milky Way. While we can only look at part of the galaxy with this data, we assume that this pattern is going to be found throughout the disk."

Importantly, the findings show that the features previously identified as rings are actually part of the galactic disk, extending the known width of the Milky Way from 100,000 light years across to 150,000 light years, said Yan Xu, a scientist at the National Astronomical Observatories of China (which is part of the Chinese Academy of Science in Beijing), former visiting scientist at Rensselaer, and lead author of the paper.
"Going into the research, astronomers had observed that the number of Milky Way stars diminishes rapidly about 50,000 light years from the center of the galaxy, and then a ring of stars appears at about 60,000 light years from the center," said Xu. "What we see now is that this apparent ring is actually a ripple in the disk. And it may well be that there are more ripples further out which we have not yet seen."


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/03/150311124139.htm



Just like water down the drain.  Professor Susskind would agree.  It behaves like that because the ETHER is a fluid.

http://www.thelivingmoon.com/forum/index.php?topic=6666.msg92900#msg92900

  Gravity is a flow, inertia is a wave.  The way of the universe is consistent, from the subatomic to the cosmic.  All matter and energy we observe is just motion in the ETHER.  Gravity is a motion OF ETHER.   Quantum entanglement is possible because entangled particles are connected in the ETHER via subatomic black holes and entanglement is superluminal.

Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

Lunica


COSMO

Quote from: Lunica on March 16, 2015, 03:10:09 PM
So Nasim haramein is right!  8)

Do you think so?  Is that what I am describing?  I admit I am not totally familiar with his theories.  Can you share some of your thoughts on this? 

Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

COSMO

Lunica thinks that Haramein is right.  I am not sure about that.  I will look into it.

Here is more information on the possiblity of gravity "leaking" into subatomic black holes.  I do think that ETHER flows into subatomic black holes and gravity is the result.  It's a super fluidic universe.  Maybe the LHC will verify this model. 



Will the Large Hadron Collider find a parallel universe? Particle smasher could become a gateway to alternate realities, say scientists
Scientists predict gravity can sometimes leak into an extra dimension
If this happens, it will create tiny black holes that can be found by LHC
LHC has failed to find any, but study claims it has gravity model wrong
Theory says it should be looking for black holes at higher energy levels
The LHC is due to be turned back on next week with double the energy


It has found the 'God particle', and could soon reveal a mysterious force known as 'dark matter'.
But when it turns on next week, some scientists are betting the Large Hadron Collider will detect something just as exciting; a parallel universe.
This is according to a new study that claims miniature black holes - a key sign of a 'multiverse' - could be detected in Cern's LHC in Geneva.

'Just as many parallel sheets of paper, which are two dimensional objects (breath and length) can exist in a third dimension (height), parallel universes can also exist in higher dimensions' Mir Faizal from the University of Waterloo told Dailymail.com.
'We predict that gravity can leak into extra dimensions, and if it does, then miniature black holes can be produced at the LHC.'
Professor Faizal and his team have calculated the energy at which they expect to detect these mini black holes in gravity's rainbow, according to a report by Lisa Zyga at Phys.org.
'If we do detect mini black holes at this energy, then we will know that both gravity's rainbow and extra dimensions are correct,' added Professor Faizal.

GRAVITY'S RAINBOW THEORY
The Rainbow Gravity theory suggests that gravity's effect on the cosmos causes different wavelengths of light to behave differently.
This means that particles with different energies will move in space-times and gravitational fields differently.
The theory was proposed 10 years ago in an attempt to reconcile difference between the theories of general relativity and quantum mechanics.
One consequence of rainbow gravity is that our universe stretches back into time infinitely with no singular point where it started.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3001664/Will-Large-Hadron-Collider-parallel-universe-Particle-smasher-gateway-alternate-realities-say-scientists.html#ixzz3UoZ6IvAa

Gravity as the result of space/time/ETHER flow into black holes is something I think is accurate.  A universe that stretches back into time infinitely with no singularity is also accurate I believe.  It's a bubble universe with every black hole, at all scales, creating spatial extensions of ETHER, the raw stuff of creation.  Gravity flowing into subatomic particles is driving subatomic rotation and sustaining the universe!  EVERYTHING we can observe is motion in or of the ETHER.  THAT is the first principle.



Cosmo

And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?