Science > Physics > Quantum Gravity 219.0: Another Blow To Rounding Off of Singularitiesand the Anti-Black-Hole Faction from Dark Matter
| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"OsherD" |
| Date: |
22 Dec 2007 04:41:19 PM |
| Object: |
Quantum Gravity 219.0: Another Blow To Rounding Off of Singularitiesand the Anti-Black-Hole Faction from Dark Matter |
From Osher Doctorow
A. A. Grib and Yu V. Pavlov of Friedmann Lab for Theoretical Physics
and (Pavlov) The Herzen U. St. Petersburg Russia in "Do active
galactic nuclei convert dark matter into visible particles?", arXiv:
0712.2667 physics.gr-qc, astro-ph, physics.hep-ph, 5 pages with 2
columns each, provide considerable indications that Dark Matter is
being converted to visible particles by Supermassive rapidly rotating
black holes through scattering processes and reactions some of which
are related to the Penrose Process.
The Dark Matter apparently consists of superheavy particles with mass
close to the Grand Unification (GU) scale created by vacuum by
gravitation of the expanding Universe. Part of them survive to the
present time as Dark Matter with larger lifetimes than the breaking of
GU symmetry, having become metastable. But in active galactic nuclei
(AGN) due to the big energies of Dark Matter DM) particles swallowed
by the black holes, opposite proceses can occur, with DM particles
becoming interacting and their decay on visible particles leads to
observed flow (by the Augur Group, Science 318 (2007) 938) of ultra
high energy cosmic rays.
A sizeable although still minority segment of physicists has been
trying to "round off" singularities such as the Big Bang to avoid
"embarrassment" of physics at having to include infinite magnitudes,
but from this article Supermassive Black Holes open up a giant
research opportunity for creation of visible matter without extremely
unusual or complicated assumptions.
This is in agreement (although Grib and Pavlov don't say this) with
Probable Causation/Influence (PI) which is not restricted to finite
bounds on almost anything because the scale [0, 1] in Probability can
represent infinity (as 1).
Osher Doctorow
.
|
|

|
Related Articles |
|
|