Black Hole Perspectives Yet Untold

Fred-Rick
The Startup
Published in
6 min readJan 11, 2020

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Black Holes Explored — Are they like the Eyes of Hurricanes?

A person is exploring a man-size tunnel, with a Black Hole at the end not reflecting the light from the man’s hand.
Photo by Wil Stewart on Unsplash

Imagine a binary star system, two stars orbiting around a common barycenter. Fairly simple setup. Next, using a plain-language question to address the issue of this article: How many gravitational centers does the binary star system have? No need to overthink it; the correct answer is three. Each star has a gravitational center and both stars share a collective gravitational center (commonly known as the barycenter). The collective gravitational center occurs mid-space and there is no material entity found in that specific location. With this article the claim is made that something similar happens with Black Holes: No material entity needs to exist in that specific location.

A star cluster of ten stars will have eleven gravitational centers. A galaxy will have as many gravitational centers as there are stars and planets in that agglomeration plus it will have this additional collective gravitational center. The more stars in a collection, the stronger the gravity of this barycenter will be. The point of this article is that no material entity needs to be associated with the collective center.

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Interestingly, scientists admit that they have a hard time dealing with the gravitational outcomes of more than two bodies. Interactions with two

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