Do black holes burp?

Do black holes burp?

Conventional Scientists believe that black holes burp on their food! In this episode of Punk Science TV, we explore this concept.

A Ridiculous idea

Scientists tend to think of people like myself as spouting a load of New Age spiritual nonsense. In some cases such as when the word ‘ quantum’ is bandied about amongst healers with no real mind to its actual context in physics, these accusations may have a case.

However, there are times, when mainstream scientists are the ones who come across as ridiculous. So in this example, we are discussing the concept of burping black holes.

The wrong monster

As you may know, the prevailing concept amongst mainstream scientists is that black holes are these great devouring monsters that tear apart stars and anything else that comes too close.

However, once the actual evidence began appearing, it became clear that black holes are visible because they are so bright and that also give off a lot of energy and material.

old picture of black holes

Old Picture of Black Holes, Shutterstock

Burp after the feast

Unable to give up their long-cherished notions that black holes are destructive monsters, these jets that are being emitted from black holes are then turned into ‘burps’.

The idea is that the black hole has feasted and then burps on its food.

This is lazy science.

The Projection game

Rather than realise that their concepts and theories do not match the evidence, they invent ‘burping’ black holes. Human characteristics are being projected onto objects in space as a way of coping with behaviour we don’t understand.

We understand that humans sometimes burp after eating a big meal so we have projected that onto black holes in order to avoid the thorny issue that, according to their own theories, nothing should escape a black hole.

Jets are predicted by The Black Hole Principle

Intermittent jets streaming from black holes are exactly what we would expect in The Black Hole Principle which says that black holes are creative.

We do not need to project any nonsensical ideas onto black holes if we understand that they are just a natural part of the universe unfolding.

Black Holes produce jets at the speed of light

 

Five things you probably didn’t know about The Moon

Five things you probably didn’t know about The Moon

Five things you probably didn’t know about the Moon

Here are five mind-blowing facts you may not have realised about our closest neighbour

1. The Moon is flashing at us and we don’t know why

For many years now we have seen flashes on the Moon. They last between a few minutes to hours and we can’t predict them.

They have been spotted by amateur astronomers as well. Interestingly they do not seem to leave traces behind on the surface of the Moon. 

Some speculate that these flashes could be associated with seismic activity but astronomers do not really know what they are.

Explanation: these flashes are created because the Moon also displays Black Hole Principle behaviour in that sometimes it creates light through the annihilation process of matter and antimatter. 

The Black Hole Principle

The Black Hole Principle

2. A very dense anomaly has been detected under the South Pole of the moon.

As our ability to analyse bodies in space become more sophisticated, we have been able to scan the moon more deeply and found a few surprises. This has led to the finding of a very dense anomaly at the South Pole of the Moon. It could be some kind of very heavy metal and it’s 300 km beneath the surface. Our sense of the consistency of the moon has had to change. 

Explanation: As discussed in previous articles on this site, it seems that many elements are generated by The Black Hole Principle, possibly all the elements. So this could be the reason why there is a dense anomaly 300 km beneath the surface of the Moon. It is being created by the centre of the Moon. 

Five things you probably didn't know about the moon

Image: © NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/University of Arizona

3. The Moon contains water ice and could be producing it.

We used to think that the Moon was dry but now we know there is a lot of water there. It is especially around the poles and in craters as water ice.

Explanation: Water production is one of the hallmarks of The Black Hole Principle. We would expect water to be plentiful at the poles as The Black Hole Principle works in a bipolar jet fashion as seen at the galaxy level.

Moon craters then become a result of an upwelling force not impact. As the flow reaches the surface from the Moon’s core, water jets are formed, hence the ice found in the craters. So far there have been signs that mainstream scientists are realising that moons can have upwelling effects and explosions due to the crater dynamics but this is far from a generalised idea. 

bipolar jet black hole

4. There could be active volcanoes on the moon.

Astronomers have detected signs of volcanic activity on the far side of the moon. We think there was some in the past but it could still be going on. We see volcanic activity on other moons in the solar system but this was also unexpected. 

Explanation: Volcanic activity is also the periodic release of energy from beyond the speed of light from the inner black hole dynamo of each planet of each moon. 

5. The moon is brighter than the sun in the gamma-ray spectrum.

We now have different telescopes in use that look at different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. This has revealed to us that the Moon is actually brighter than the sun in the gamma-ray spectrum.

Explanation: Of course, the mainstream scientists will say that the gamma rays are only just hitting the moon from outside, but according to The Black Hole Principle, it is perfectly possible for the Moon to be creating gamma rays itself. 

I hope you have enjoyed our exploration of the Moon. Are there any facts that we have missed out? Which new revelations have interested you the most? Please leave a comment below this article. 

 

Where did the Water of the Earth come from?

Where did the Water of the Earth come from?

Where did the Water of the Earth come from?

The Earth is almost covered with water, but it may surprise you that scientists are still debating as to how all this water got here in the first place. The general consensus is that water arrived originally on this planet via an impact collision with a comet or asteroid. Analysis of comets and asteroids in space have shown that the type of water they contain is not always an exact match. 

The real answer is that we don’t know for sure the answer to this pretty basic question. 

Finding the Solution

According to the Black Hole Principle, each and every celestial body from stars to planets to comets has the ability to create its own water from its centre. In this way, they follow the pattern laid out for everything from supermassive black holes to thunderstorms. 

The Ocean beneath us

The Earth is no different. In 2013, I gave a keynote lecture at the Institute of Noetic Sciences in which I predicted that the water of the Earth is actually being produced by its interior. In just a few months, scientists announced to the world that an ‘ocean’ had been found deep below the Earth’s surface.

It is water bound up in rocks and crystals but nevertheless represents more water than exists on the Earth’s surface. 

The Simple Pattern

Once you know The Black Hole Principle, you can easily make such predictions about the universe because you understand the simple underlying pattern throughout reality. 

Therefore we have solved the questions of where Earth’s water has come from – it is being produced by the Earth itself. 

 

When is an Asteroid like a black hole?

When is an Asteroid like a black hole?

Today on Punk Science TV, we shall discuss the recent findings on asteroid, Bennu and how they relate to black holes.

A surprise

I was recently at a lecture about asteroids and the person presenting said that recent explorations of the asteroid Bennu threw up some major surprises. The asteroid, Bennu is intermittently ejecting material. You can see this quote from the director of the program here.

NASA Visualization Technology Applications and Development (VTAD) – Use your cursor to visualise Bennu

Why an asteroid is like a black hole

This was totally unexpected from the point of view of the astrophysicists. However, this pattern of intermittent ejection is totally in keeping with The Black Hole Principle.

Asteroids are ejecting material

Image: Pixabay

I am really excited that this new evidence is pointing to asteroids also displaying Black Hole Principle behaviour.

No conventional explanation

Whilst I was in the meeting there was a discussion that the ejections were too powerful for them to be caused by the usual suspects.

Conclusion

This is just the start of asteroid exploration and already asteroids are showing signs of Black Hole Principle behaviour. It’s very exciting to see what the future holds. Perhaps we will start to pick up antimatter/ matter or light emissions from asteroids too. They have already picked up carbon on the asteroid in keeping with the concept that fossil fuels are actually created by this principle. Let’s see what happens in the future. 

 

An Unsung Hero of Science

An Unsung Hero of Science

An Unsung Hero of Science

There he was: an unassuming, humble man telling anyone who would listen about his crystal technology. He even had photographs of the crystals he was growing in his laboratory, but I must admit I did not know what I was looking at. Little did I know that he was about to change my life. 

This was April 2001, in Albuquerque, New Mexico USA at a conference on science and consciousness. He gave me a copy of his article and I packed it in my suitcase along with the signed copies of books by William Tiller, Lawrence Fagg and a then relatively unknown author called David Hatcher Childress.

It was only when I got home and looked at the paper that I realised this unassuming man, who wasn’t even a speaker at the conference, was on to a really big scientific idea. His words resonated with me and made me feel like I was trying to remember something.

The man’s name was John Milewsksi and the concept that got my attention was that light comes out of black holes and creates all the forces of the universe. He called the light, Superlight and explained that there was one source: one force.

Background to Dr Milewski

I later found out some of the background to Dr Milewski. He is a retired Los Alamos National Lab scientist who is an internationally recognized leader in his field of Advanced Materials with more than 42 publications and 30 patents. He has several degrees in Chemical Engineering, a Masters in Metallurgy and a PhD in Ceramic Engineering. He is a former employee at Exxon Research Center and at Thiokol Chemical, Rocket Engine Division.

He is also an entrepreneur who founded his own research company called Superkinetic, Inc. to work on a revolutionary electric light bulb which uses a single-crystal-fibre filament, a permanent exhibit at the Smithsonian American History Museum. 

For some years he has been known on the lecture circuit speaking on Ormus which is another area of his expertise and there are several videos online of him apparently making gold in a microwave. 

 

Despite his credentials, I feel he is someone who just isn’t getting the recognition that he should be probably because of his understanding of the spiritual dimensions of the universe and how intrinsic they are to the way the universe works. 

I saw him lecturing some years later and told him that his work had inspired me. I have emailed him since, hoping to send him a copy of Punk Science but received no reply. In my mind, he is one of the unsung heroes of science.

The Big Idea

Taking inspiration from the work of William Tiller who realised that the solution to Maxwell’s equations involving imaginary numbers, could have implications for our world. Normally we leave out the solutions that arise from the square root of a negative number which is called imaginary numbers in mathematics.

But Professor Tiller realised this could be describing a different type of radiation; whereas normal light is electromagnetic radiation then there is another solution that gives magneto-electric radiation or Superlight.

Superlight has a strong magnetic component and travels at the speed of light squared.

Milewski theorised that black holes are a source of Superlight radiation. He believes that Superlight is the singularity and the source of all forces in physics including gravity.

This is a quote from his paper on Gravity.

Gravity is not an attraction! It is the result of a universal pressure, exerted by SuperLight as it rains in from infinity, from all directions, onto every object.

When I had the vision that gave me The Black Hole Principle, my ideas diverged from that of Milewski’s in that I think the singularity of transcendent light is beyond that of the c2 but his concept of the one source: one force is true for the black hole principle too.

I think for me he is one of the unsung heroes of science because he correctly deduced that light comes out of black holes and creates all the forces of physics.

He definitely helped to inspire me. Who do you think are the unsung heroes and heroines of science? Please comment below and let me know. I may just feature them in a future article. 

Reference: http://customers.hbci.com/~wenonah/new/milewski.htm

Image: Still from Videoblocks and Goanimate

 

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