The spins of some early galaxies could be a clue that the entire observable universe exists within a black hole—except, that ...
A Kansas State University study using Webb Telescope data found most galaxies in a deep field rotate in the same direction, ...
This preferred direction of spin might be due to one of two reasons: either our entire universe exists in a black hole, or ...
New research from a professor at the Kansas State University that used imaging from the James Webb Space Telescope gives ...
"One explanation is that the Universe was born rotating. That explanation agrees with theories such as black hole cosmology, ...
"The analysis of the galaxies was done by quantitative analysis of their shapes, but the difference is so obvious that any person looking at the image can see it," Lior Shamir, associate professor ...
Black holes have such extreme gravity that not even light can escape. They have been caught shredding entire stars and can ...
"One explanation is that the universe was born rotating," paper author and computer scientist Lior Shamir of Kansas State University said in a statement. "That explanation agrees with theories ...
A recent study analyzing 263 galaxies has added new fuel to an extreme cosmic theory—that our entire universe might actually exist inside a black hole.
Some of the galaxies that rotate in the same direction as the Milky Way. Credit: Lior Shamir / Kansas State University Since its launch a little over three years ago, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope ...