At the heart of the Milky Way lies a vast bulge and in its core is an object connected to how the galaxy functions. The Standard Model of Cosmology says it’s a massive black hole, although the Electric Universe Model sees it as a plasmoid with intense electric and magnetic fields, compressing filaments of material into the torus and out at the poles.
Surrounding this plasmoid at the galactic core is a 700 light-year section of substantial activity called the Central Molecular Zone, containing dense molecular clouds—normally expected to produce stars, but devoid of any. Filaments within the CMZ move at hundreds of kilometres per second, compared to the previously examined Maggie filament—some 12 kiloparsecs or 39,000 light-years from the CMZ—moving much slower at 54km/s.
EU advocate, Gareth Samuel, creator of “See the Pattern”, explains how these filaments are being discovered in the interior and all throughout the Milky Way—as well as between galaxies on a vast scale. These flowing filaments of material power our electric universe.
Subscribe to Thunderbolts eNewsletter.