![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A spiral galaxy like the Milky way has a cyllindrical opening as ones
seen with hurricane eyes. It is a system that carries swirling properties as galaxies are solar systems which spin, assumingly faster and more energetically in the center regions. Smaller seemingly quiet elliptic galaxies were just recently found to have massive turbulant and explosive activities in their centers. I assume as a galaxy would grow, it would have more distinct spiraling characteristics. In the center of galaxies are suggested to be found supermassive black holes. I have in the past few months been wondering about black holes, why they should or should not occur as Einsteinian wells (on a sheet) that become so deep in terms of curvature and depth that nothing can escape them, not even light. It is simple to assume that a huge star or black hole with supermassive weight is located in the center of galaxies, something where all surroundings are sucked into. However on large scales I have found that a spiral galaxy such as the Milky Way looks like a hurricane storm, with similar characteristics. It has spiraling tails, two distinct ones, clearly a system which swirls as it moves slowly over billions of years. Spiraling galaxies seem to have a ring of stars surrounding them, so scattered that they are hardly visible. Another finding which was recently discovered regarding the Milky Way galaxy, that it has a ring of stars, scattered randomly along a ring a hundred thousand lightyears diameter, hundreds of Million stars (the Sun is 30 thousand light years from the center of the Galaxy. The assumption that all spiral galaxies have rings is something I came up with, but only the Milky Way is known to have it currently. It was like the assumption just a few years ago that it is not known that planets exist in other Solar systems. Well. Other spiral galaxies have a dim ring with scattered old Suns along that ring. What else do we know today? No X-Rays are arriving from the center of spiral galaxies (an quasars). Current black hole theories predicted that a super-massive black hole generates a very strong source of radiation. The radiation from galaxies does not come from the center, it comes from other regions of the galaxy. Spiraling systems like spiral galaxies carry a storm-current-like flow dynamics, and have no gravity in their (near) centers. The galaxy acts as a very large solar system, and the larger the highly explosive turbulant activity in its central region, the larger the opening becomes. Our Solar System is part of the galaxy, its dynamics, and its activity in the epicenter, a central turbulance involving an overall high volume of energy and motion requires the presence of a cylindrical shaped opening (due to the mass a spiral galaxy contains). This shows that gravitation acts as a system for high volumes, inertial forces which reach out to great distances to build a system of dynamics with a central eye, which due to its very high temperatures shines in North and South directions extremely brightly. I believe most spiral galaxies have an eye. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Continuing: The ring of stars scattered around spiral galaxies
have a purpose. They feed the galaxy. Tails reach into this outer ring, usually along two tails matter moves inward. This ring acts as an atmospheric condition for the spiraling galaxy which acts as a hurricane storm made up of Solar matter. This is a storm system which based on reading on hurricanes, once born feeds its own energy, but takes place in the atmosphere, which is very complex to interpret. Where did these old stars come from? Wondering alone in space, left behind from other galaxies? I would say highly likely that deep space contains scattered matter which may form small elliptic galaxies by themselves or get caught up in large galactic solar hurricane storm centers, sounds like Star Wars. Quasars are a very important aspect to this theory. Quasars appeared as very bring source of lights in the sky, and for decades atronomers were puzzled on how to explain them. Today they know they are galaxies emitting a very bright source of light, but where the light comes from which outshines the entire galaxy in pictures they do not know. They speculate that perhaps gasses in the galaxy light up, they refer to it as galaxies on fire. Simply put, the explanation is that most spiral galaxies should have an eye, as seen in hurricanes. When the Galaxy faces right toward earth, the brightness of light coming from the center of the galaxy is so great, that it outshines the entire galaxy. Its this open eye that is so hot and energetic which should be producing the immense light coming from quasars resulting in a light source outshining the whole galaxy and not a galaxy which goes on fire and burns with millions of solar masses. Its been also shown as I mentioned that its been shown (reference not found, will search for it one day) no X-Rays are coming from the center of an active quasar (produces jets) as was expected by black hole theories that there should have been a massive black hole producing X-Rays. Where the X-Rays arrived from instead were not described in the publication (perhaps arrived from "other surrounding regions" that may still be a black hole???, or a black doughnut hole, but the publication did not elaborate, merely described that no X-Rays were found in the center of the quasar that was under stody for years, and X-Rays were collected for 5 years or so). |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Summing some of the important elements of this theory:
1. Rings surrounding spiral galaxies. 2. Explaining quasars, why they shine. 3. Hurricane eyes are a natural aspect of large swirling storms, and similarities can be found in the shape of spiral galaxies and the question of the eye in the center appears. When do these eyes become a prominent feature, this can be compared with thunderstorms and hurricanes. This shows that a storm eye is naturally part of this galaxy and not necessarily demanding a central massive object, but swirling and motion expanding from the central eye which acts as a hurricane on large scales and not as a supermassive object sucking everything in. 4. Small elliptic galaxies have been found to have turbulant explosive properties in their centers, and scientists have suggested the likelyhood of finding a black hole there. How prominent are atmospheric forces in regards to black holes, we see active turbulances in the center of large accumulating couds as well. When do they turn into hurricanes with eyes? I wish scientists would not have rejected my findings and questions. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
So it comes down to the conclusion that no supermassive
blackhole exists in the center of spiral galaxies. (Changed account as Google timed out my 6724 account for posting more than 15 in 6 hours. The gestapo knows that no more than one message should be posted on a message board in a day. They are so off its unbelievable.) |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
So it may come down to the conclusion that no
super massive black holes may be located in the center of spiral galaxies, and the center would be a swirling environment resembling a hurricane eye, and not a supergiant star forming a black hole as priorly thought. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Let me sign it, but first I will check the spelling
and grammar, then I'll post it. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Any use for this theory?
Einstein's E=mc2 was of great use. What's useful about the fact that spiral galaxies produce bright eyes, so powerful that looking straight at them from a distance one runs into quasars with light generated that outshines the whole galaxy and appears as a very bright star for the lenses of space telescopes? Nothing but offering an understanding for quasars. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
But that understanding opens a door for something
much larger, used for astronomists to explain gravity, the big bang, and allows them to move to distances in space and time never perceived before, to explaining big bangs, worm holes, white holes and black holes at a very close scientific proximities. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, I'll tell you what, you hop on the first FTL ship to come by and go to
the center of the milkyway and as you pass the event horzen of the one that is there, you can tell us all what's it's like on the otherside. That is if you can suvice the massive radation that is to be found in the center and ofcouse you forgot to say anything about the bar that they've mapped that connects two of the arms or anything about the small dwarft galaxys that are being tore apart and are infalling into our galaxy. -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info Astronomy Net Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/astronomy_net In Garden Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/ingarden Blast Off Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/starlords Astro Blog http://starlord.bloggerteam.com/ wrote in message oups.com... So it may come down to the conclusion that no super massive black holes may center of spiral galaxies. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
nope, value = -0
-- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info Astronomy Net Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/astronomy_net In Garden Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/ingarden Blast Off Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/starlords Astro Blog http://starlord.bloggerteam.com/ wrote in message oups.com... Any use for this theory? Einstein's E=mc2 was of great use. What's useful about the fact that spiral galaxies produce bright eyes, so powerful that looking straight at them from a distance one runs into quasars with light generated that outshines the whole galaxy and appears as a very bright star for the lenses of space telescopes? Nothing but offering an understanding for quasars. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Fossil Galaxy Reveals Clues to Early Universe (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | News | 0 | January 14th 06 05:04 PM |
The Gravitational Instability Theory on the Formation of the Universe | Br Dan Izzo | Policy | 6 | September 7th 04 09:29 PM |
Breakthrough in Cosmology | Kazmer Ujvarosy | Space Shuttle | 3 | May 22nd 04 09:07 AM |
Breakthrough in Cosmology | Kazmer Ujvarosy | UK Astronomy | 0 | May 21st 04 06:23 AM |