Stuart Talbott: Black Holes—Making the Impossible Possible | Thunderbolts

The next time you read a headline like—“Another impossible Black Hole discovered…”—you might want to consider something that IS possible AND definitely real—the ‘Plasmoid’.

First coined by MIT physicist Winston Bostick in 1956, Plasmoids at the center of galaxies concentrate and store electromagnetic energy from inflowing electric currents. Once a threshold density is reached, Plasmoids discharge energy, usually along the galaxy’s spin axis, forming galactic jets and X-ray emissions—observations that conventional astronomers attribute their cause to be from a so-called “Black Hole.”

Peer-reviewed scientific papers on these concepts can be found in the IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, which has featured many special issues and articles on Plasma Cosmology, including the cosmological role of the Plasmoid.

Independent researcher Stuart Talbott explains why mainstream cosmology is in such a misguided period—its defenders discard the laws of physics rather than consider well-developed, peer-reviewed concepts of plasma science.