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Monday 7 September 2015

Galaxy formation by Matter Transfer

 Galaxy filament connect Black Hole to White Hole
The transfer of material to the center of the Galaxy and resulting expansion may better describe galaxy evolution with a basic Relative association. Powered by a Black Hole matter transfers through space time by a physical gravitational connection to a second object theorized as a White Hole.

Material passes through a connection between the two objects in a double channel with a gravitational and magnetic association (one filament rotates clockwise the other anti-clockwise using the BH rotation that spirals the gravitational force). Evidence for these filaments come from detecting double helix structures that cross the Universe and found in galaxies. 

The transfer relies on the conversion of matter to antimatter at the inner accretion zone and that to be gravitationally negative and repelled from the BH (it is not conclusively proved that antimatter is either gravitationally positive or negative). These filaments glow due to the possible interaction with matter and  volatile antimatter during the transportation. This gives a direct Relative connection as only a Black Hole has the necessary force to forge them if made by gravity.

Antimatter arriving at the Galaxy Center, at great speed, around the Central Object is repeled to form part of the outward drift process and the conversion back to matter and energy at the active 'torus'. There are two huge jets that blast from the Central Object, associated to the double time bridge transfer, forming the Bar of stars that become the Spiral Arms as part of outward drift.

Notice the Central Object orientates to the filament and that orientation is associated with the connection between the mass of the Galaxy and the Central Object as all three, in this scenario, are connected. This one sided connection may form asymmetric jetting in the Galaxy Core


This is a color enhanced version of the infrared signal to make the Double Helix Nebula's features easier to see. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA

Above is an image of a double helix structure passing directly towards and orientated to the Milky Way's Galaxy Core as the Time Bridge that might be evidence for a double helix gravitational antimatter conduit connection.

This transfer predicts a galaxy is made by matter arriving at the center, not so much merger, which is easy to prove as a growth process cannot be confused by random merger and galaxy features do correlate to Relative growth. In theory every BH will have just such a partner and gravitational connection as tidal filaments.