SPACITY EXPLAINS BLACKHOLES
A blackhole in a Galaxy is not as important as Sun is to a Solar System.
Sun forms 99.9% of the solar mass, with planets accounting for only 0.1% of the solar system mass. But when you consider the Milky Way the Super Massive Black hole accounts for only 0.001% of the Galaxy Mass. A total role reversal. This shows that Milky Way will survive even if you remove the Super Massive Blackhole from the center.
Having proven that Blackhole is not central to the scheme of things, its genesis may be easier to decipher. It does not make a difference if the blackhole is formed along with the galaxy or after galaxy formed. We will consider both the cases.
Along with the galaxy
When the galaxy is forming on the periphery, The nebular gases at the center are likely to be left out. But it has its own capacity to create a super massive star at the center. Whose going Supernova will clear much of central gas and create a Super Massive Black Hole at the center. This shows that blackhole is not the initiator of galaxy formation.
After galaxy formed
Irrespective of whether there is an SMBH at the center, blackholes keep popping up both in the inner ring area and the spiral arm. When such a blackhole pops up around a swarm of stars how does the spacity act? Initially each blackholemay have the same mass as the parent star and it may move in the same path. But as it gathers mass, S3 acting on the cumulative mass, will not be able maintain the pace of the blackhole in sync with the stars. The blackhole can either slow down, slide in or out of the galaxy. Eventually the blackhole would slide in towards the center and join the existing SMBH at the center.
Sink
The space pressure at Black Hole is near the absolute zero, like that of nothingness. And this Absolute Zero pressure is surrounded by positive pressure. Then why wouldn’t the entire galaxy not get flushed into the backhole like in a sink? If the galaxy were a static structure it sure would. Since the galaxy is already in motion because of its own inertia, spacity would follow the same. But if at all that 100000:1 ratio comes into effect, we will have a galactic clog for sure.
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