Black Holes/Spiral Galaxies – Tuesday 22nd February 2022


Black Holes/Spiral Galaxies – Tuesday 22nd February 2022

I read part of an article yesterday and very interesting. As usual I can’t find it, (just looked for it). The writer mentioned the notion of the central black hole within spiral galaxies being responsible for the spiral effect. And also the question; which came first the central black hole or the galaxy it is within?
My view is the galaxy came into existence first with the creation of the black hole occurring soon afterward.
The spiral effect, in my view, was already present and a consequence of how such galaxies form. It’s tempting to contemplate that the black hole determines the spiral effect though. Some liken it to a the drain in a sink, I liken it to the the pool filter as one of the black holes functions. And though there is rotation throughout galaxies and solar systems, black holes and the universe itself, this isn’t the cause of the spiral effect.
As some people are aware, my work related to galactic stars creating the galaxies which are like the first stars much in the same way that dinosaurs previously existed. They had their moment in the cycle of a living planet. So now the region that we exist in doesn’t produce galactic stars anymore because the environment, it’s size and plentitude of resource has been. That’s not to say that galactic stars aren’t occurring elsewhere just as dinosaurs may be roaming elsewhere at this time.
And die to the orderly format of the stars in galaxies, the spiral is required for that order and safety it provides. The black hole is maintenance and provides a pathway and new environment for new beginnings like the pathway our galaxy is in. They act as a vent for matter and combustible gases which are usable elsewhere.
The galactic stars would have been so huge with a gravity etc that would have pulled matter and existing stars into it. When it released. IE when it had reached its life span of size and next step of evolution it released those already existing stars as well as the resource material gathered throughout its life span. It appears to me to have been an orderly process, not a chaotic single explosion. So we see the ancient remnant stars and the new stars currently forming and everything in-between. This is why, in part, that I conclude the spiral was intended and a consequence of the initial forming. It ensures safety of distance between solar systems so that accidents of collisions are prevented for practical periods of time. Otherwise it would be a shamozzle and solar systems would fail prematurely. Over time we should be able to determine this though, (while we spin, rotate and zoom through space together along with our neighbours.)
Fiona MacLeod (C)