
// if any of you are there, I have a gina account there in case anything happens
Madam Gourmand, Culinary Scientist
8.1K posts

@EvillyDelicious
Silver Age Villainess OC. Mun is a 21+ asexual autistic person. Not lewd. Lewd Alt is @LewdGourmand

// if any of you are there, I have a gina account there in case anything happens

// if any of you are there, I have a gina account there in case anything happens

// if any of you are there, I have a gina account there in case anything happens



@HeroicJestah something as banal as profit."













A recent study suggests a potential link between black holes and dark energy, proposing that black holes could contribute to the universe's mysterious accelerating expansion. Traditionally, black holes were thought to gain mass through mergers or by absorbing surrounding matter. However, researchers studying elliptical galaxies over nine billion years found that black holes there seem to gain mass independently of such processes. This growth aligns with "cosmological coupling," meaning the black holes expand along with the universe itself. This mechanism could explain dark energy as an inherent feature of black holes, rather than an external force. If further research supports this theory, it could reshape our understanding of black holes as potential sources of dark energy. ๐ iopscience.iop.org/article/10.108โฆ

Astronomers have recently discovered an enormous structure in space called the "Big Ring," a vast formation of galaxies spanning roughly 1.3 billion light-years. This discovery, along with a previously identified structure known as the "Giant Arc," challenges the Cosmological Principle, the assumption that, on large scales, matter is evenly distributed throughout the universe. The existence of such massive structures defies current models, as they exceed the theoretical size limit for cosmic formations, which is thought to be around 1.2 billion light-years. The Big Ring and the Giant Arc were discovered in the same region of the sky and at a similar distance from Earth, which raises questions about the formation of such large, organized structures. Theories to explain these structures, such as Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations (BAOs) or cosmic string remnants, have been considered but do not fully align with the observed characteristics of the Big Ring. These findings suggest the possibility that our current understanding of the universe might need significant adjustments, potentially requiring new theories or modifications to existing cosmological models to account for these anomalies. ๐ arxiv.org/pdf/2402.07591



Sae is tapping her foot, waiting for a train, she's in a huff, impatient.



