Civil Disturbia | Ghost Black Hole from another universe @CivilDistribution | Uploaded September 2018 | Updated October 2024, 18 hours ago.
A research team comprised of scientists from Oxford University, the University of Warsaw, and the New York Maritime College, believe they have evidence that points to the leftovers of a black hole that existed in a universe that preceded the one we’re currently living in. However, rather than visible light, the black holes leave behind what is known as cosmic microwave background radiation, or (CMB).
The idea here is that even when a universe ends and a new one begins, the background radiation from decaying black holes of the previous universe remains. A theory such as this isn’t much good without some kind of concrete foundation of data to back it up, so the researchers began hunting for what they call “Hawking points.” Named for Stephen Hawking, Hawking points are areas where the researchers believe the leftover radiation from now-extinct black holes still exists.
The team’s theory has been a hot topic for researchers, with plenty of naysayers claiming that these “points” are merely the result of the random scattering of the cosmic background radiation. To remove as much doubt as possible, the team created randomized maps of background radiation and attempted to spot similar points. The random data didn’t replicate the phenomenon, so the the researchers believe their theory is sound, and that the Hawking points are indeed the last remaining traces of long-dead black holes from previous versions of our own universe.
#GhostBlackHole #CosmicDisturbia
SOURCE: bgr.com/2018/08/28/ghost-black-hole-hawking-points-cmb
Music provided by - youtube.com/user/teknoaxe
A research team comprised of scientists from Oxford University, the University of Warsaw, and the New York Maritime College, believe they have evidence that points to the leftovers of a black hole that existed in a universe that preceded the one we’re currently living in. However, rather than visible light, the black holes leave behind what is known as cosmic microwave background radiation, or (CMB).
The idea here is that even when a universe ends and a new one begins, the background radiation from decaying black holes of the previous universe remains. A theory such as this isn’t much good without some kind of concrete foundation of data to back it up, so the researchers began hunting for what they call “Hawking points.” Named for Stephen Hawking, Hawking points are areas where the researchers believe the leftover radiation from now-extinct black holes still exists.
The team’s theory has been a hot topic for researchers, with plenty of naysayers claiming that these “points” are merely the result of the random scattering of the cosmic background radiation. To remove as much doubt as possible, the team created randomized maps of background radiation and attempted to spot similar points. The random data didn’t replicate the phenomenon, so the the researchers believe their theory is sound, and that the Hawking points are indeed the last remaining traces of long-dead black holes from previous versions of our own universe.
#GhostBlackHole #CosmicDisturbia
SOURCE: bgr.com/2018/08/28/ghost-black-hole-hawking-points-cmb
Music provided by - youtube.com/user/teknoaxe