Black Holes

Black Holes:

At the center of each galaxy is a black hole formed from a star that exploded in the previous generation. These black holes become surrounded by all the new generation stars and planets that have also developed due to the death of the previous star. The black hole in the Hydrosphere is also the ‘Node’ at the end of a branch in the Lithiosphere giving balance to the third-generation stars and their accompanying filaments of lithium.

As the star dies it produces what is called a supernova explosion resulting in vast emissions of energy and matter, causing the star to collapse transforming it into a black hole. These black holes are spinning continuously, dragging all the debris in the stellar neighborhood inside while also swirling the area around it, giving the elements that are left a chance to combine and clump together to give birth the next stars in its galaxy. As the black hole spins, it begins to accrete material which then gets continually squeezed and smashed together in an effort to break it down into its fundamental particles and centralize them…a kind of matter recycle machine. The black hole exerts tremendous amounts of energy negating the effects of gravity on the mass being absorbed, thus working off the new energy being consumed from that same mass, stripping its energy, and causing their structure to lose its cohesion and slowly break down and either fall towards the center if antimatter or radiate outward if normal matter.

The antimatter from the black hole creates a node at the end of the branch its star was with in the lithiosphere. As the star collapsed it closed off the end of the branch in the lithiosphere, which then gets filled with the recycled fundamental particles of antimatter from the black hole, filling the closure, which then begins to bubble out into a Node. These Nodes then use the particles at their disposal to again branch out, extending tendrils of filaments to spiral out, pulling the hydrosphere with them, and expanding further into the space, into the Aether, and to eventually sprout stars of their own, continually creating self-reliant ecosystems throughout the Universe.

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Published by Darin George

Philosopher of Physics