Here is an elaboration on my blackhole/white hole theory.
What's the only thing in the universe that would be bright enough to be considered a white hole?
Think about it... what outshines an entire galaxy, if only for a little while?
Right... a supernova.
A particularly big one leaves a black hole behind.
Many astrophysicists conclude that all complex elements in the universe are manufactured in supernovae.
Well, suppose for just a moment that a critical mass of Hydrogen compresses on a single point of space and time. Over time, this "supergiant star" will compress hydrogen into helium. Once there is no more hydrogen in the system, the same star will compress Helium into Carbon, Oxygen, Neon and Magnesium. Once there is no more Helium, the supergiant will compress the elements further into Silicon, Sulphur, Chlorine, Argon, Potassium and Calcium. Once that process is complete, the star will once again, further compress those elements into Titanium, Vanadium, Chromium, Manganese, Iron, Cobalt and Nickel.
Up until this poin, the nuclear fusion reactions inside this star have been producing exothermic reactions. Further compression of this matter therefore, will constitute an endothermic reaction, and we all "know" that nothing can have a temperature less than absolute zero...
So how does one construe absolute zero temperature? Well, that means that what we have here is simply energy contained in a mass, and the mass is not doing any work.
So what happens if a critial mass of Titanium, Vanadium, Chromium, Manganese, Iron, Cobalt and Nickel are further compressed to a point at which their atomic nuclei begin to fuse?
Well... an endothermic reaction would take place at absolute zero. The bizzare effect of this endothermic reaction would give the system a NEGATIVE TEMPERATURE. The matter in this superstellar remnant will begin to coalesce, and with a critical mass, all of the matter will condense into Neutronium (a solid made entirely of neutrons, like a big glob of nuclear glue).
Now we have a neutron star.
So what happens if the matter is further compressed so as to cause neutrons to coalesce?
You can't have one nucleon with six quarks in it...
The first two coalescing neutrons will indeed annhiliate themselves, almost like matter and antimatter.
If there is just enough space for the gamma photons to escape the system, the periodic annihilations of neutrons will cause the sample of neutronium to spew out an almost laser-like X-Ray beam.
Now our Neutron star is a pulsar.
Now, if... and only if... the gravity of the situation is so strong that there IS NO SPACE between the Neutrons, the gamma photons will be reflected off of the solid neutronium and focussed on the centre of the system. The gamma photons themselves will begin to coalesce, and since nothing can escape from the system, more and more gamma photons will be focussed on the same point in space and time.
Now consider this... all things that are of God's making have some sort of length. If any amount of energy can be made to occupy ZERO LENGTH, the result will be a quantum singularity through which anything can pass. If the entire system's gravity is pushing all matter towards that open singularity, all of the matter and energy in the system will be compressed into that singularity.
Now we have a black hole.
For the first planck instant of its existence, all of the mass will occupy original time, and it will be released backwards in time from the origin of the singularity. By changing a mass' temporal trajectory to the real negative, the mass will in fact be moving FASTER THAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT. After the creation of the black hole, the temporal trajectory of any matter or energy that passes through the event horizon will be thrown back in time faster than light, only to be slowed down by the intense gravity of the singularity inside the system.
The matter will continue to slow down until it reaches light speed again. This will happen inside the core of the Supergiant star that created it.
This could be experimentally proven by seeing if *certain* supergiant stars have a tendancy to get massively smaller as they get older. Why smaller?
Because one black hole can generate an entire galaxy...
What would happen if an entire galaxy was just one big supercalafragilisitic-giga-monster star?
That galaxy would probably likely look like a quasar.
Thus the universe exists as a triality paradox at the origin of time. It is all of nothing in infinite space, everything in zero space, and in perfect equilibrium, ALL AT THE SAME TIME.
That is why everything is three dimensional, even the dimensions themselves and the sub-dimensions.
3 in 3 in 3. 27.
Conclusion:
Every time a Supernova erupts and subsequently results in the formation of a black hole, a new original time spike is driven into existence and that black hole proceeds take part in forming an entire galaxy with a number of other black holes.