Black holes and galaxies formations.

socratus

socratus
Dec 10, 2008
1,131
17
38
Israel
www.worldnpa.org
Black holes and galaxies formations.
-----
" . . . supermassive black holes with the mass of millions or billions of Suns are assumed
to reside in the cores of most galaxies, and they play a key role in current models
of how galaxies have formed over the past billions of years."
Correct.
Galaxies formations can have their source "black holes".
Why?
1- "A black hole of one solar mass (M☉) has a temperature of only 60 nanokelvins
(60 billionths of a kelvin) Hawking radiation" / Wikipedia /
2- A black hole has a temperature within a few millionths
of a degree above absolute zero / Oxford. Dictionary./
3- "Stellar black holes are very cold: they have a temperature of nearly absolute zero –
which is zero Kelvin, or −273.15 degrees Celsius. Supermassive black holes are even colder."
My conclusion:
The cold and infinite cosmic vacuum has the same temperature as black holes.
It means that so-called "black holes" are only parts of the infinite cosmic vacuum.
So-called "black hole" is other name of the cosmic vacuum.
And as was said " . . . they play a key role in current models of how galaxies have formed
over the past billions of years." as a process of quantum gravity going on for billions of years.
------
 

Attachments

  • Vacuum-Bohm.jpg
    Vacuum-Bohm.jpg
    9.8 KB · Views: 0

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,516
11,498
113
Low Earth Orbit
Black holes and galaxies formations.
-----
" . . . supermassive black holes with the mass of millions or billions of Suns are assumed
to reside in the cores of most galaxies, and they play a key role in current models
of how galaxies have formed over the past billions of years."
Correct.
Galaxies formations can have their source "black holes".
Why?
1- "A black hole of one solar mass (M☉) has a temperature of only 60 nanokelvins
(60 billionths of a kelvin) Hawking radiation" / Wikipedia /
2- A black hole has a temperature within a few millionths
of a degree above absolute zero / Oxford. Dictionary./
3- "Stellar black holes are very cold: they have a temperature of nearly absolute zero –
which is zero Kelvin, or −273.15 degrees Celsius. Supermassive black holes are even colder."
My conclusion:
The cold and infinite cosmic vacuum has the same temperature as black holes.
It means that so-called "black holes" are only parts of the infinite cosmic vacuum.
So-called "black hole" is other name of the cosmic vacuum.
And as was said " . . . they play a key role in current models of how galaxies have formed
over the past billions of years." as a process of quantum gravity going on for billions of years.
------
Maybe just maybe we are living in a black hole?