The Connection between Black Holes and the Big Bang in the Universe
Black Holes and Big Bangs

by Donald Eric Davison donald@dialup4less.com
http://www.dialup4less.com/~donald/blackholes.html


The explosion of a Black Hole into a local Big Bang
(This is not a computer generated picture)

Three Observations:
I wish to connect three observations made by astronomers. One is the sighting of many Black Holes, two is the very large explosions taking place in the universe, and three is the coming together of five galaxies in our local part of the universe - our galaxy is one of the five.

In the locating and observation of Black Holes, it has been noticed that while there are Black Holes of different sizes, there seems to be a limit on the size, that is, no Black Holes were found larger than this certain limit. Now, if Black Holes are to act like Black Holes, they would insist on getting larger and larger, but they don't beyond this observed limit. Something must happen to them when they reach this limit - something does happen - I say they explode. I say this because very large explosions called Gamma Ray Burst have been observed in the universe.

A not so Big Bang:
I will go one step more and say that one of these explosions is what our area of the universe experienced about fifteen billion years ago, a very large explosion involving five galaxies of material, but not an explosion involving the entire universe. We had a Big Bang, but not as large a Big Bang as popular myth would have us believe.

Our local Black Hole explosion tossed out material that expanded outward and formed into five galaxies. These galaxies are now coming back together. In Billions of years another local Black Hole will form and it too will grow to its final limit and explode into another local Big Bang and begin another cycle of forming galaxies, suns, and planets in our local area of the univerese.

Donald Eric Davison November 24, 2005