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To whom it may concern,
I am endeavoring to create a national day for Canadian research to highlight both the achievements and hurdles of Canadian researchers. This will give Canadian researchers one day a year to focus the spotlight on research in Canada.
To do so, we must petition Parliament. I have the support of my local MP, but I need more signatures than just in my local area. Can you please bring this to your readers’ attention and have them download the petitions from http://www.canadianresearchday.ca and mail them to me on the address listed on the petitions?
Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
Dale Martin
I did not know where to post this idea. I took physics in high school and conceptual physics in college. So I read everything that comes across my computer or on science on cable TV.
I looked at a photo of a black hole in a nearby galaxy. It showed numerous star traversing the event horizon. Some appeared as short lines as in a time delayed photo, but I surmised the cause was because the stars close to the event horizon were traversing very fast. Some seemed to have an arc, so I supposed they would escape the black hole which has been depicted as a pit. Then came a realization that it could be something else. So I was trying to find someone to critique the theory that came to me. Or most likely, show me why it could not work.
Theory: Black holes are not pits! They have a spiral shape like a sun, moreover, they have a point of singularity which pulls in stars from 360 degrees in all directions. The stars that I see traversing the Black hole are circling the black hole as if it were a Globe in a descending elipse. The force appears to be consistent from any adantage point observing the Black Hole Globe. Of course, if we could see the Milky Way’s Black Hole, it would look like an infinity symbol. I believe also that each black hole can produce a singularity event which would send planets, etc flying out towards the end of the Universe. Moreover, there never was one big bang, but lots of smaller big bangs which happened at some critical point at the end of black Hole phenomenon.
I appreciate any criticism on my humble theory.
Later… Rocky
Hi Rocky, sadly I’m not a physicist either – but perhaps one of our readers could give you an enlightened response. I’ll leave your comment up for them to see and will email you a response if one appears – cheers.