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Galactic Rotation Explained for the astrogeek, and us too!

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  • Galactic Rotation Explained for the astrogeek, and us too!

    Dark matter is a filliment of silly imaginations
    This scientist always has great answers to intelligent questions!!!

    My question was:
    I Noticed today that present galactic rotation could prove White Hole cosmology!
    The eruption of matter from elsewhere into our universe through a white hole,
    Could have created our galaxy giving it its current otherwise unexplained rotation.
    This could make Dark Matter unnecessary And maybe even non existent!
    Thanks, Lewis Brackett in san Diego

    Hi Lewis, and thank you for your note. First of all, the eruption of matter that you are talking about is mainly coming from the galactic centers. We see this on a massive scale with quasars. This is not proof of white hole cosmology. When we are dealing with plasma physics in the lab, we get jets of material coming out from the poles of plasmoids. Plasmoids are formed as a result of highly concentrated electric and magnetic fields This is the situation we have at the centers of all galaxies. What we see in distant galaxies are quasars, which are essentially plasmoids. They are highly energized when first formed and then start to settle down. The center of our Milky Way galaxy is an older quasar, not a black hole. It is still shooting out material from its north and south poles. Black holes cannot do this, as computer simulations have proven.

    If the white hole cosmologists are saying it must be a white hole instead of a black hole, this, too, is speculative. Plasma physics gives us the mechanism which easily explains what is happening and can be reproduced in the lab.

    About dark matter you are correct. It does not exist. It was imagined to try to explain why the outer arms of galaxies are spinning around their cores as fast as the inner arms. Gravity cannot account for this without massive amounts of dark matter forcing the movement. However, again with lab experiments, we have found that two or more interacting plasma filaments quickly form miniature galaxies where the outer arms spin as fast as the inner arms do. This is simply a characteristic of plasma interactions. Plasma filamentary interactions do not change with the size of the filaments. If you look at spiral galaxies, you can see quite clearly where two or more giant filaments have started to spin around each other and the stars, formed by the pinches in the filaments, are strung out like beads along them.

    Dr Setterfield
    Last edited by lewisb; 04-16-2018, 09:24 PM.
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