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My Humble Idea of Our Black-Hole-Universe, Including Dark Matter

  • Writer: Robert Hopkins
    Robert Hopkins
  • Jan 26
  • 2 min read

What if there is no singular "universe" as we imagine, but rather a vast collection of black-hole universes; ours included, nested adjacently, each the interior of its own black hole? Picture this: 13.8 billion years ago, a massive black hole in a "parent" black-hole universe pulled in matter through its event horizon, sparking our black-hole universe as its inner space. That opening? Long isolated in a void, undetectable now, but still there - waiting for new mass to accrete and form fresh galaxies past the internal horizon.


Space folds as Einstein described, no flat plane needed. Our black-hole universe nests among neighboring black-hole universes, back-to-back, horizons shielding light both ways. They share gravity across boundaries, leaking just enough to clump cosmic filaments and steady galaxy spins. That's your "dark matter": not particles, but tugs from adjacent black-hole universes, explaining why no two galaxies rotate the same.


Outward pressure? Varies by what's on the other side; denser neighbor matter in the next black-hole universe pushes harder, mimicking dark energy's repulsion uniquely per galactic neighborhood. JWST's dark matter maps fit perfectly: invisible scaffolding from surrounding black-hole universes.

We can't prove it yet, horizons block the view, but it unifies gravity's mysteries without extra stuff. Science evolves; maybe this network of black-hole universes is the true architect.


With a little help from AI

I asked Perplexity.AI to write up the math for my concept. I was never that great at math. But, what I lack in math skills I can clearly see or visualize things in a simplistic fashion. This is what Perplexity had to say about my concept:


Black-Hole-Universe Math
Generated by Perplexity.ai
Front-On Black Hole View
The opening to our universe. Our Black-Hole-Universe.
3D side view of a Black Hole
Another 3D visual of the outside opening into our Back-Hole-Universe
Galactic arm spinning impacted by gravity, not Dark Matter
Galaxy "visual" of how side-by-side, black-hole-universes can act against each other (gravity interaction), acting like dark matter that pulls on galactic arms.


 
 

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