The Millstone Lure, 25th Day of Summer, 525 M.E. (Castor): The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey has revealed that out of 263 early galaxies observed, 66% spin clockwise while only 34% spin counterclockwise. In a universe with no preferred direction, one would expect a 50-50 split. This unexpected bias raises the question of whether this phenomenon is a leftover imprint from the birth of the universe.
While this observation would cause me to wonder about the accuracy of the observations and the statistical likelihood of a 66-34 split versus that of a 50-50, some have made the quantum leap that this could mean that the universe lies within a massive black hole in another, “parent” universe.
Let me explain. In physicist Nikodem Poplawski’s torsion theory, matter doesn’t collapse into a singularity - it gets spun and twisted by extreme gravity, forming an entirely new universe. The Big Bang could have been matter rebounding from collapse inside a black hole. The spin of that black hole may have left its fingerprint on the rotation of galaxies in our universe, explaining the JWST’s puzzling spin imbalance. The notion that our universe lies within the event horizon of a black hole in a parent universe is consistent with an model called Schwarzschild cosmology.
If verified, this could change not only how we think black holes work, but about how our own universe came to be.
Not everyone is convinced. Some researchers suggest the anomaly might be caused by the Milky Way’s own spin influencing the JWST’s readings. If that’s true, we may need to rethink how we measure the cosmos. That might also help address big questions like the Hubble tension or the existence of unexpectedly mature galaxies in the early universe
It also raises the possibility that if our universe exists in a black hole within a larger, parent universe, that universe might also exist within an even larger universe, and black holes within our universe might contain universes of their own.
Imagine a whole set of universes all nestled within one another like a set of Russian Matryoshka dolls. A black hole forms in a universe, and matter collapsing into that hole creates a Big Bang, and a new universe is formed. A black hole forms in that new universe, matter collapses, and yet a third universe is formed. This could go on infinitely. Something to think about.
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