Thursday 6th July 2023 Black Holes continued:


Thursday 6th July 2023
Black Holes continued:

The estimated age of the universe, (AFBW) being based on expansion, is needing revisited. Mr Hubble wasn’t to know that the expansion could have other facets influencing the expansion. His initial estimate was 2 billion years so I don’t think he intended his revised estimate to be set in stone.
With the new imaging by the JWST there are Black Holes and Quasars to be seen, that if I understand correctly, are appearing in the estimated first billion years. If we are in an AFBM then fully formed stars coming in capable of the necessary explosion to create these early Black Holes could explain this timeline. Otherwise….

The filaments being seen at the Galactic centres. I think they are a very important clue. I was initially reminded of the ash residue of incense. The pattern it makes. If the longer pieces of ash aren’t bumped in any way, they stay long and intact.
So my first thought was these filaments are residue from the jets perhaps. I theorised that these jets occurred (before we knew of them, I believe?)
The reason being is that the Black Holes had to act as inlet as well as outlet. There has to be an out flowing stream or streams within the inlet stream somewhere. As it turns out, they do. I recently gave thought to a shower head because this design assists in pressure and direction. Or a hose. If the filaments occur in singular stream or multi stream, this should clarify.
As we know, there is much radiation in the ‘universe’ and naturally it’s inside Black Holes. Stars emit particles, gas etc. We inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide, which is then no good to us, but it’s just what plants use. This theme, in various aspects of life on Earth, is common.
It’s likely a theme outside of Earth too.
From the moment I felt certain we were inside a Black Hole, then that could only mean that new stars and galaxies had to be forming and evolving in other large younger Black Holes and that would mean that the filaments at the Galactic centres are the residual particles and dust from stars within these Black Holes, in a condensed form which is left after the gas has been dealt with. It’s what I would expect to see at the inlet/outlet of the entry way into an AFBW, the size of our universe.
Fiona MacLeod (C)