Latest revision 28-06-2022
Empty Hole Photo
In a recent (2019 April 10) article, titled First
M87 Event Horizon Telescope Results, it is claimed that The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) has mapped the central compact
radio source of the elliptical galaxy M87 at 1.3 mm with unprecedented angular resolution. The accompanying
"photograph of a black hole", as I've seen it
for the first time, can be found at the Sterrenstof forum.
Despite all this effort by established science, I'm sorry to say that quite another picture is emerging with Halton Arp's Theory of
varying elementary particle rest mass, as has been formulated with our Unified Alternative Cosmology.
The most important point to be made here is supported by the article
A Different View of the Universe
(Answers in Genesis). Quote mining is in red:
There are NO massive black holes in the center of galaxies. Rather the idea is that new matter emerges into our
universe in active galactic nuclei,
where Arp suggests there may be white holes rather than black holes. White holes?
In fact, there may be nothing there at all. Maybe the center of a galaxy is a place where Matter is created from Nothing;
it's an Empty Hole.
Suppose that the center of a galaxy is an Empty Hole indeed. A numerical simulation may be
developed in an attempt to reproduce that famous "Black Hole" photograph, but from a completely different theoretical perspective:
a ring of newly born stars around an Empty Hole. The end-result is shown below, preceded by the original from
First M87 Event Horizon Telescope Results:


Further theoretical underpinning reveals that these sort of "photographs" as such do
not contain enough information to make any decisive conclusions possible. This not to say that
Halton Arp's white holes are right and
Heino Falcke's supermassive black holes are wrong. We have only shown that
there is evidence too for the alternative as presented here.
Update (2022 May 13):
Astronomers Reveal First Image of the Black Hole at the Heart of Our Galaxy.