Did scientists discover an 'exit door' inside black holes?
- A new study of 263 galaxies reveals that 60 percent rotate clockwise, contradicting previous assumptions of isotropy in the universe, as noted in the study published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
- The researchers used data from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope to analyze galaxy rotation, suggesting that the universe may be within a black hole, according to Lior Shamir.
- Shamir states that while the data is intriguing, more observations are needed to validate the findings and understand their implications on cosmology.
- An alternative explanation is that the Milky Way's rotational influence could affect the measurements of galaxy rotation.
67 Articles
67 Articles
A new puzzling observation by James Webb Space Telescope: Galaxies in the deep universe rotate in the same direction
Lior Shamir, a computer scientist in the Carl R. Ice College of Engineering at Kansas State University, published a study of James Webb Space Telescope images that suggests astronomers should factor the Milky Way's rotational velocity in observations of deep space galaxies.
'Trapped inside a black hole': NASA's James Webb Telescope discovers a mind-blowing possibility about our existence
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has observed that most distant galaxies rotate in a preferred direction. Data from the JADES survey suggests that around two-thirds spin clockwise, while the remaining third rotate counter-clockwise, challenging expectations of a random distribution.


New Nasa data hints we could be living inside a black hole
Black hole cosmology suggests our entire universe formed inside a black hole from another universe
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