Spherical cosmological models: an alternative cosmology
Herwig Dejonghe

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel cosmological model where the universe exists inside black holes of a larger universe, challenging traditional big bang theories and suggesting new interpretations of dark matter, redshift, and universe geometry.
Contribution
It introduces a spherical, black hole-based universe model that does not originate from a big bang and reinterprets cosmological phenomena within this framework.
Findings
Universe inside black holes with a spherical edge
Dark matter could be neutrinos in this model
Mass ejection from black holes linked to galaxy redshifts
Abstract
The properties of universes are explored that are entirely in the interior of black holes in another universe, a `mother universe'. It is argued that these models offer a paradigm that may shed a new light on old cosmological problems. The geometry of such a universe is discussed including how it would appear to the observer. The Hubble parameter is direction dependent, but it is argued that the interpretation of any such dependence will be hard to separate from local inhomogeneities. The models do not originate from a big bang, but rather from an initial collapse and subsequent infall, that started probably a very long time ago, presumably much earlier than the accepted age of the universe. The relation to the concordance model is discussed and it is shown that a lot of the existing theory can be taken over into the proposed models. The universe has an edge, which is an ordinary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
