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JWST Spots Giant Black Holes All Over the Early Universe | Quanta Magazine
(www.quantamagazine.org)
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I do believe there is a strong link to be understood between what is observed in this post and what was posted :
X-Ray echo suggests our galaxy was "active" (quasar-like) just 200 years ago - Nature
by @CanadaPlus one month ago.
Thanks for this (X-Ray echo) post and for the last comment you made here in the other thread, about Penroses' current work.
So I will read through some of this and try to come back with something worthwhile to say.
Update : I read some more and most of that is just out of my reach. The only paragraph I kind of understand somewhat is this :
...and now I need some rest.
With all sincerity and seriousness ...
... kay
What's the implication then of Penrose's idea? That no matter the trajectory of a universe some sort of "big bang" singularity is inevitable, or at least is so for many more trajectories than previously thought.
I read through these and try to understand them but mostly I don't like those theories, because (in part) more and more there are disparities between them and observations.
So I came up with some ideas myself, one of which I wrote in here :
"New physical cosmological model : is it coherent ?"
But it may take a few years or a few thousand before we have a good cosmology.