Why are jets coming out of the famous black hole at almost the speed of light?

Since 2003 when The Black Hole Principle downloaded into my consciousness, there have been many times when I have predicted the way in which the universe works and those predictions have been correct. And it was all the way back then, that I first published that black holes give out jets at the speed of light.

I hate to say I told you so!

So when the announcement came that the most famous black hole in the world, the one that was imaged for the first time in 2019, was emitting jets at the speed of light, I was not surprised. It is even in this announcement that jets or charged particles were seen coming out of the black hole M87.

 

Black Holes produce jets at the speed of light

Jets from M87 Credit: NASA

The Explanation

This is classic behaviour of The Black Hole Principle which says that most of the universe lies beyond the speed of light, beyond our normal perception. At the interface of the black hole, light spirals in from these higher dimensions and then comes to the edge of our reality where it splits into matter and antimatter creating material at just below the speed of light, because it has just slowed down to this dimension.

 

The Black Hole Principle

The Black Hole Principle

 

In fact, we see these jets around stars and planets too, all the way down to the quark level – it is the same pattern just at different scales.

Understanding The Black Hole Principle is key to understanding why the jets are close to the speed of light and why they are produced in bipolar jets.

 

Black Holes produce jets at the speed of light

 

Let’s face it, Black Holes are creative!

So what do you think of the announcement that black hole produce jets at the speed of light? Do you think it is time for a new paradigm in which black holes are seen as creative? After all, the 1:1 relationship of the ratio between the size of the supermassive black hole in the centre of a galaxy and the galaxy itself has been recorded for some time now.

 It’s time we started calling a spade a spade: Black Holes are Creative!  

 

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