The Cosmic Mysteries

Hey there, fellow cosmic explorers and dreamers of impossible worlds!

Bari Marcus Anthony here, and as a science fiction writer, my mind is constantly trying to bend reality just a little. Today, I want to share a theoretical feeling I’ve been pondering, a grand idea about the universe that’s been rattling around in my head. It’s a concept I want you, my amazing sci-fi fans, to consider, debate, and perhaps even “plunder” for your own wild imaginings.

We all know about the Big Bang, right? That massive explosion that kicked off our universe. But what if… what if it wasn’t just a one-and-done deal?

My Cosmic Theory: The Universe’s Endless Birthdays

Here’s my theoretical take:

I have a strong theoretical feeling that the Big Bang wasn’t a singular event in time, but something that is constantly happening, over and over, as new universes are born. Think of it not as the beginning, but as a continuous, endless process of creation, like bubbles forming in an enormous, cosmic vessel. Our universe? Just one of those bubbles, expanding and growing.

And here’s where it gets really wild: I believe black holes are deeply involved in this process, actually making these new universes on the ‘other side.’

Imagine a black hole in our universe. We see it as a destroyer, a vacuum that pulls everything in and never lets go. But what if, instead of just crushing matter out of existence, it’s possible Black Holes are supersonic cosmic jet engines, constantly recycling and compressing everything, then sparking a new Big Bang? A brand new universe, fresh and ready to expand, completely separate from our own.

And here’s another kicker : Why do some Black Holes go dormant and then, out of the blue, turn on their cosmic engine, gathering food, like planets and stars ?

Why is that ?

Did you know there’s a Black Hole in our cosmic universe?

Yes! It’s Gaia BH1, the closest known dormant black hole to Earth: it’s a stellar-mass black hole, roughly 9.78 times the mass of our Sun, quietly orbiting a Sun-like star about 1,560 light-years away in the constellation Ophiuchus.

Now. Just think about that one for a minute. It truly is mind blowing!

The Implications for my Imagination

If this theoretical feeling holds any truth, even in the realm of pure speculation, it opens up some incredible possibilities, doesn’t it?

• A Truly Infinite Multiverse: Not just a few parallel universes, but a constant, ever-growing family of them, each potentially born from a black hole in another, older universe.

• The Ultimate Recycling Program: What seems like destruction (matter falling into a black hole) is actually the ultimate act of creation on a scale we can barely comprehend.

• A Cosmic Family Tree: Could universes have parents, grandparents, and even great-grandchildren, all connected by these mysterious, universe-spawning black holes?

Now, before you start rewriting your physics textbooks, remember, this is purely my “theoretical feeling” ; as a sci-fi writer I push the boundaries on a grandest scale. Indeed, it pushes against our current understanding, but that’s what science fiction is all about, isn’t it? Asking “What if?” and exploring the farthest reaches of possibility.

So, what do you think? Does this idea resonate with your own cosmic daydreams? Could black holes be more than just devourers of light? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below – let’s explore this theory together!

Now, if only I could get Neil deGrasse Tyson, Michio Kaku, Katie Mack, and Brian Cox together to ponder the acceptance of whether my theory is possibly true. Can you imagine if my idea was proven as real facts in the future?

That would truly be spectacular!

Bari Marcus Anthony

Guardians of Humanity

One response to “My Theory : Universes Constantly Born”

  1. […] universe is so vast, so incredibly old, and yet, as far as we can tell, we haven’t found any other signs […]

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