There are a lot of very entertaining, curious, and exotic objects described in these reports, and most, if not all, are not well understood; nor are they necessarily expected to be found in the vicinity of a black hole -- the one which is theorized to be at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. I will leave a couple of links to the science media at the end. But first I would like to stop and take a look at the Milky Way through the eyes of the Electric Universe model.
In March of 2009 Wal Thornhill wrote in "The Black Hole at the Heart of Astronomy":
- "The so-called 'queen' of the sciences, cosmology, is founded upon the myth that the weakest force in the universe -- gravity -- is responsible for forming and shaping galaxies, stars and planets. But even if this were true, gravity remains unexplained. How it works is still a mystery."
Wal Thornhill continues,
- Electric Galaxies Have Electromagnetic Hearts
The question for the Electric Universe is therefore: If black holes don't exist, how do we explain recent observations at the center of our own Milky Way?
- filaments, arcs, and shells
- the double helix nebula located close the Galactic Center
- the circumnuclear disk
- the magnetic field in the center of the Milky Way, which has dipolar geometry and is stronger than elsewhere in the galaxy
- the energy of jets from active galactic nuclei
- the lack of energetic jets issuing from our own galaxy
- X-ray emissions and persistent high-energy flux from the heart of the MIlky Way, sometimes firing every 20 minutes
- Gamma rays
- orbits of stars close to the galactic center
- young stars close to the imagined location of the black hole
- a mini-spiral at the Galactic Center