Two Dead in Tragic Shooting Involving Police Officer's Son

A new study led by Lior Shamir, an associate professor at Kansas State University, has uncovered surprising rotational patterns among galaxies using data from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. Shamir analyzed 263 galaxies and found that approximately two-thirds rotate clockwise, while only a third rotate counterclockwise, contradicting the expectation of an even split in rotational directions.
The findings, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, suggest that the universe may have originated in a rotating state. This aligns with black hole cosmology theories, which propose that our universe resides inside a black hole. The results bolster a concept known as "Schwarzschild cosmology," suggesting that galaxies and black holes might be interconnected in ways previously unconsidered.
In addition, Shamir raised the possibility that our Milky Way's rotation could be influencing the observed rotation patterns of these distant galaxies. If validated, this insight could necessitate a re-evaluation of distance measurements in cosmology and clarify other significant questions about the universe's expansion rates, according to Shamir.