20200518

Elderly Black Hole in the Infinite Universe


PSI Blog 20200518 Elderly Black Hole in the Infinite Universe



It had to happen. Finally, astronomers have found a bare-naked black hole—it has no stars around it. And it’s only 1,000 light years away. Now, according to anyone’s theory, black holes form at the center of galaxies. What prey tell could this one be doing all by itself? Why is it not surrounded by a galaxy full of stars like all its sisters complying with the 13.82 billion-yr universe? Now, as we have mentioned previously, “black holes” are not “holes” and they are not black. They are the nuclei of galaxies much like the one found in the Milky Way recently.

A naked black hole probably means it is what happens to a galaxy when, given enough time, all its surrounding stars and planets have been pushed into it, jamming all those neutrons and electrons into an extremely dense body. That would have taken a very, very, very long time. The Milky Way is supposedly only 13.7 billion years old, and yet its black hole is less than 1% of its mass—an indication of its youthfulness. The nuclei of cosmological vortices gradually become increasingly dense and increasingly massive over time. The Sun, for instance, has 99% of the mass of the solar system, and it will last at least another 4.5 billion years. In “Universal Cycle Theory” we speculated that the Milky Way, because its nucleus is so tiny, will take trillions of years to fully mature.[1]

In tune with our speculations on the Milky Way, the naked black hole probably is trillions of years old. Looks like Big Bangers will have to invent a new ad hoc to handle that falsification!








[1] Puetz, S.J., and Borchardt, Glenn, 2011, Universal Cycle Theory: Neomechanics of the Hierarchically Infinite Universe: Denver, Outskirts Press, 626 p. [https://go.glennborchardt.com/UCT].