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News
Release 48 - White
Holes On May 27, 2004, Edward Churchwell, a University of Wisconsin-Madison astronomer, announced their findings using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope that the Milky Way Galaxy was churned out hundreds of new stars. In the center of the galaxies are two black holes. One is composed of condensed matter and antimatter. The black holes have the mass of a billions of suns. The Einstein-Rosen Bridge keeps the matter and antimatter black holes separated. The oscillations between the black holes at opposite ends of the wormhole force the black holes to become white holes that eject matter and antimatter in opposite directions forming the spiral arms of stars within the galactic disk. White holes are similar to black holes except white holes are ejecting matter verses black holes are absorbing matter. In 1916, the concept of black holes came from Karl Schwarzschild, who derived the first model of a black hole using Einstein's theory of general theory of relativity. Nothing, not even a particle moving at the speed of light, can escape the gravitational pull of a black hole. The existence of white holes is implied by a negative square root solution to the Schwarzchild metric. The Schwarzchild model is a space-time-matter metric. The definition of the type of holes relates to the movement of matter and antimatter in space-time-matter continuum. Matter is absorbed by black holes and ejected by white holes. It is important to remember that black holes and white holes can be composed from matter or antimatter. Since the Milky Way Galaxy has white holes, the billions of other spiral galaxies in universe contain white holes. For more information please see white holes. |
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