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A recent study analyzing data from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has revealed a surprising pattern in galactic rotation. According to Lior Shamir, an associate professor of computer science at Kansas State University, two-thirds of the 263 galaxies examined rotate clockwise, while only one-third rotate counterclockwise. This finding challenges the long-held assumption that galactic rotation would be evenly distributed between clockwise and counterclockwise directions.
Shamir posits two main explanations for this phenomenon. One possibility is that the universe originated from a rotating black hole, aligning with theories like black hole cosmology, where the universe is theorized to be inside a black hole. "A preferred axis in our universe might have influenced the rotation dynamics of galaxies," theorist Nikodem Poplawski noted, which could support the idea of black holes being gateways to other universes.
Additionally, Shamir suggests that the Milky Way's own rotation could have skewed the observations, indicating that light from galaxies rotating against the Milky Way's motion might appear brighter. This could necessitate a recalibration of distance measurements in cosmology.