The plasmoid at the center of a galaxy 300 million light-years away has astronomers stumped. Its behavior is perplexing to space scientists for exactly one reason—they simply do not recognize that it exists.
For many decades the space sciences have accepted that at the center of most galaxies is a super massive black hole—a hypothetical object believed to be billions of times more dense than our own Sun, and whose gravitational field is so intense that nothing, not even light, can escape.
The term plasmoid was coined in 1956 by the renowned MIT physicist Winston H. Bostick to describe a concentration of electromagnetic energy caused by electric currents. At the center of galaxies, where the Standard Model claims is a super massive black hole, the plasmoid concentrates and stores energy, and is connected to a larger galactic electrical circuitry.
Independent researcher Stuart Talbott describes what advocates of the EU Model and plasma cosmology have always known—it’s the physics of the plasmoid that makes the stupendous energies and mass at the center of a galaxy explicable.