Did Our Universe Begin Inside a Black Hole? A Shocking JWST Discovery Suggests It Might Have
A mind-bending find from the James Webb Space Telescope is shaking up everything we thought we knew about the universe's origin — and pointing to an idea once thought purely theoretical:
We may be living inside a black hole.
The Twist? A Cosmic Rotation Imbalance
Astronomers analyzing deep-space data from JWST’s JADES survey found something strange:
Out of 263 ancient galaxies, 66% rotate clockwise, and only 34% counterclockwise.
In a balanced, directionless universe, that’s a huge red flag — it should be 50/50.
So what could explain this cosmic bias?
A Universe Born From a Black Hole’s Spin
This fits a radical theory called Schwarzschild cosmology, which proposes:
Our universe was born inside a black hole in a parent universe
Black holes don’t end matter — they birth new universes through spin and spacetime torsion
The Big Bang was actually a bounce-back from gravitational collapse, imprinting the parent black hole’s spin onto newborn galaxies
The JWST’s data might be the first observable fingerprint of that ancient spin.
But not everyone’s convinced...
Alternative Theories
Some say this rotation imbalance may be a result of the Milky Way’s own spin skewing our view. If so, we may need to rethink how we:
Measure galactic motion
Solve cosmic puzzles like the Hubble tension and early galaxy formation
Whatever the answer, this discovery could redefine cosmology — showing that black holes may not destroy reality, but create it.
Research by Lior Shamir, MNRAS (2025)
#JWSTDiscovery #BlackHoleUniverse #CosmicRotation #SchwarzschildCosmology #BigBangBounce
A mind-bending find from the James Webb Space Telescope is shaking up everything we thought we knew about the universe's origin — and pointing to an idea once thought purely theoretical:
We may be living inside a black hole.
The Twist? A Cosmic Rotation Imbalance
Astronomers analyzing deep-space data from JWST’s JADES survey found something strange:
Out of 263 ancient galaxies, 66% rotate clockwise, and only 34% counterclockwise.
In a balanced, directionless universe, that’s a huge red flag — it should be 50/50.
So what could explain this cosmic bias?
A Universe Born From a Black Hole’s Spin
This fits a radical theory called Schwarzschild cosmology, which proposes:
Our universe was born inside a black hole in a parent universe
Black holes don’t end matter — they birth new universes through spin and spacetime torsion
The Big Bang was actually a bounce-back from gravitational collapse, imprinting the parent black hole’s spin onto newborn galaxies
The JWST’s data might be the first observable fingerprint of that ancient spin.
But not everyone’s convinced...
Alternative Theories
Some say this rotation imbalance may be a result of the Milky Way’s own spin skewing our view. If so, we may need to rethink how we:
Measure galactic motion
Solve cosmic puzzles like the Hubble tension and early galaxy formation
Whatever the answer, this discovery could redefine cosmology — showing that black holes may not destroy reality, but create it.
Research by Lior Shamir, MNRAS (2025)
#JWSTDiscovery #BlackHoleUniverse #CosmicRotation #SchwarzschildCosmology #BigBangBounce
Did Our Universe Begin Inside a Black Hole? A Shocking JWST Discovery Suggests It Might Have
A mind-bending find from the James Webb Space Telescope is shaking up everything we thought we knew about the universe's origin — and pointing to an idea once thought purely theoretical:
We may be living inside a black hole.
The Twist? A Cosmic Rotation Imbalance
Astronomers analyzing deep-space data from JWST’s JADES survey found something strange:
Out of 263 ancient galaxies, 66% rotate clockwise, and only 34% counterclockwise.
In a balanced, directionless universe, that’s a huge red flag — it should be 50/50.
So what could explain this cosmic bias?
A Universe Born From a Black Hole’s Spin
This fits a radical theory called Schwarzschild cosmology, which proposes:
Our universe was born inside a black hole in a parent universe
Black holes don’t end matter — they birth new universes through spin and spacetime torsion
The Big Bang was actually a bounce-back from gravitational collapse, imprinting the parent black hole’s spin onto newborn galaxies
The JWST’s data might be the first observable fingerprint of that ancient spin.
But not everyone’s convinced...
Alternative Theories
Some say this rotation imbalance may be a result of the Milky Way’s own spin skewing our view. If so, we may need to rethink how we:
Measure galactic motion
Solve cosmic puzzles like the Hubble tension and early galaxy formation
Whatever the answer, this discovery could redefine cosmology — showing that black holes may not destroy reality, but create it.
Research by Lior Shamir, MNRAS (2025)
#JWSTDiscovery #BlackHoleUniverse #CosmicRotation #SchwarzschildCosmology #BigBangBounce
