Rethinking the Black Hole Singularity

By Michael Aaron Cody

Black holes have been understood as infinite singularities for a century. In 1916, months after Einstein published general relativity, Karl Schwarzschild did something that surprised even Einstein himself. He formulated one of the very first exact solutions to relativity’s equations for a single spherical mass. Out of that solution came a radius now commonly called “the Schwarzschild radius,” also known as the event horizon – the boundary around a black hole where nothing can escape. For the last 110 years the field has built on those equations, and the picture that settled into place is the one we are all taught, that at the center of a black hole sits a singularity, a point of infinite density. Now, new published works offer a different perspective on what black holes are. 

The nearest known black hole is Gaia BH1, about 1,600 light years away. That’s roughly 9,400,000,000,000,000 miles. After the 1916 solution, the field continued on with the singularity. In 1965, Penrose wrote “Gravitational Collapse and Space-Time Singularities.” The idea is that a star becomes infinite once it collapses, leading to an unavoidable singularity. Similarly, Stephen Hawking took the same kind of reasoning and turned it the other way, applying it not to a single collapsing star but to the whole universe, running backwards in time, and arrived at the same place. A beginning that traces back to a singularity of its own. Between the two of them, the message was hard to argue with. General relativity, taken exactly as written, points to its own breaking point.  

The field has, for some reason, largely ignored the elephant in the room and hasn’t yet stopped to question the singularity. Until now, at least. The problem is the singularity itself, this idea that a black hole is just infinity and that’s the end of it. But if a collapsing star creates an infinity, that calls the whole picture into question. Is it really geometry folding neatly into an infinite point? Look at the word we use often. Collapse. Einstein used that word. So did Penrose and Hawking. But they were describing matter contracting to a singularity, not a full geometric failure of spacetime itself. Matter falls inward, geodesics run out, and they called that the end. What they did not say is that the geometry carrying all of it has a breaking point of its own. Geometry does not fold into a point. It fails. It breaks apart. And what is left in its wake, the empty void we call a black hole, is what remains after the break. Or at least, that is what newly published theories are talking about in 2026. 

New literature attacks the very fundamentals of how we describe black holes and what they are. The work that defined this shift, “Black hole singularities and the limits of the spacetime continuum,” published in Springer Nature in January, explained exactly how, why, and where black holes fail. It treats the square root of the Kretschmann scalar as a physical load on the geometry, sets a critical threshold where that load can no longer hold, and computes an exact failure surface, a calculable radius where geometry gives way, using nothing but the equations of general relativity already in hand, with no new forces and no exotic matter. The event horizon stops being a gateway to an infinite interior and becomes a phase boundary, the surface where one description of spacetime ends. The paper also unifies the field, pulling the scattered approaches – the limiting-curvature models, the emergent and thermodynamic pictures, the elastic analogies, the phase-transition descriptions – into a single principle. Spacetime has a breaking point, and everything the theory predicts outside the black hole stays exactly the same. 

Earlier this year, in March 2026, a notable group of researchers came to the same conclusion from a different direction. Jorge Ovalle, Roberto Casadio, and Alexander Kamenshchik, in a paper published in Physical Review D, “On Schwarzschild black hole singularity formation,” tracked what happens to the geometry of spacetime as a star collapses. They found it cannot stay smooth. At the center, the geometry cracks, a discontinuity they named “Minkowski breaking,” where the structure of spacetime stops being continuous. Before the black hole can settle into its final form, the geometry tears. No stress threshold, no failure surface, none of the same math. Two different roads, the same destination. And when two independent results both refuse to let the Schwarzschild geometry form smoothly, the singularity starts to look like it was never a feature of the universe, just an artifact of the equations we mistook for the real thing. 

Both of these papers are bold, fresh, and provocative. They challenge the very foundation of how we understand geometry and black holes. Since 1916, the many physicists who built this field have led us to where we are now, but that understanding is starting to shift. Black holes may be infinite singularities, or they may be phase boundaries, places where geometry fails. The uncertainty goes back to a simple fact: it has only been 110 years since this started. Humanity is still at the cusp of exploring space beyond its own moon, with much left to learn about space and its geometry. 

This article was originally published by RealClearScience and made available via RealClearWire.

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70 Comments
Neil Pryke
June 17, 2026 10:13 pm

It makes a change to read about a Black Hole which isn’t the latest dire economic forecast from the Chancellor of the Exchequer…

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Neil Pryke
June 18, 2026 8:06 pm

Stop it.

Scarecrow Repair
June 17, 2026 10:24 pm

Every time I see someone convert light years to miles, I wonder if I’m reading Salon or the New Yorker or some other elite media for the peasants. This one seems particularly pointless.

Doug Huffman
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
June 18, 2026 3:23 am

The current Babble about UAP/UFO/ET makes clear that folks do not appreciate the size of the universe. A string of significant digits is more impactful to them than a simple ‘LY’.

Scarecrow Repair
Reply to  Doug Huffman
June 18, 2026 3:50 am

I don’t think it is. $1000 means something real to almost everybody older than about 10. A million bucks is understandable only to people who have bought a car or house. A billion bucks? Almost impossible to understand other than a thousand millions. A trillion has no meaning.

Same with distances. Once you get enough zeroes, it’s meaningless. Thousands of miles is easy to understand to anyone who drives. A million is barely understandable as so many trips around the earth. A billion? Meaningless in any practical sense. Trillions and quadrillions of miles are just words.

hiskorr
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
June 18, 2026 4:25 am

Be aware of the world we are currently in! “Trillions of dollars” is a common current phrase. “Quadrillions (10^15) of CO2 molecules” are causing panic among the “scientists”. Be prepared for a dozen eggs to be priced in “quintillions of CCBD’s”.

MarkW
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
June 18, 2026 7:15 am

The vast majority of the population rarely, if ever, deals with astronomical units. They don’t have a grasp of how big a single light year is.

Scarecrow Repair
Reply to  MarkW
June 18, 2026 7:33 am

9,400,000,000,000,000 miles is oh so much more relatable.

MarkW
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
June 18, 2026 8:39 am

It’s a big number, whereas 1600 light years is not.

Reply to  MarkW
June 18, 2026 10:21 am

They’re the same number, just different units. What I want to know is how many books stacked on top of each other that is?

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Phil R
June 18, 2026 8:08 pm

No no, think bigger. How many Carbon atoms stacked atop one another.

JonasM
Reply to  Phil R
June 19, 2026 1:59 pm

Hardcover or soft?

1saveenergy
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
June 18, 2026 2:45 pm

9,400,000,000,000,000 miles is … just a walk in the park (:-))

Reply to  1saveenergy
June 19, 2026 7:45 am

Exactly . . . a walk in the ballpark, that is.

June 17, 2026 10:35 pm

Studying general relativity – decades ago – I have always found that the singularity was a mathematical artefact and that Space-Time may behave differently but had no plausible alternative view except for an hypothetical “dimensional break out” (where more space-time dimensions are created instead of a singularity).
The problem is that no one can prove anything behind the event horizon so any alternative theory must have other implications (for instance, by solving the puzzle of the observed galaxies formation time which is shorter than predicted by the GR theory – I’m not a fan of the Black Mater theory which by construction, can’t be refuted).
Will read these papers with great interest.

Gregg Eshelman
Reply to  Petit-Barde
June 18, 2026 2:54 am

The James Webb telescope’s observation of things calculated to be older than the theoretical age of the universe threw a big wrench into all of this.

SxyxS
Reply to  Gregg Eshelman
June 18, 2026 12:04 pm

As a child I already predicted a superfast aging universe: the better our telescopes become the older and weirder it’ll get.
And it aged for more than 2 billlon years.

And with every new high end telescope this will continue( though it’ll always take then years to admit).

And black holes will eventually be redefined away from a singularity; especially their mysterious reverse gravity effect where 0.1% of the mass in the center of galaxies make the 99.9% rotating around at distances of almost 1 mio lightyears.

Reply to  SxyxS
June 19, 2026 7:57 am

“As a child I already predicted a superfast aging universe . . . And it aged for more than 2 billlon years.

Uhhhh . . . the current, best science-based estimate for the age of our universe is 13.8 billion years.

Seems to me to be pretty slow aging, but then again what do I really know about such things since I’ve only examined one universe.

Ian_e
Reply to  Petit-Barde
June 18, 2026 6:24 am

Well, anyone with a Black Mater is bound to be taken seriously!

Reply to  Ian_e
June 18, 2026 11:14 am

A little off-color humor never hurt anybody.

Reply to  Phil R
June 19, 2026 6:55 pm

But . . . but . . . but black is the absence of ANY color! /sarc

Chris Hanley
June 17, 2026 10:42 pm

From my superficial reading on the subject there has been enormous progress during the past century in knowledge of the material universe from the quantum to the cosmic scale but research seems to be reaching to the limits of observation and experiment in both directions.
What happens then, does it just become all theory and mathematics?

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 18, 2026 3:14 am

Or is it really just a simulation and we are bumping into its edges?

Reply to  Keitho
June 19, 2026 8:05 am

Well, Agent Smith is fighting against humans that might realize just that by taking the red pill.

John V. Wright
June 18, 2026 12:04 am

I can’t thank you enough for articles such as these or, indeed, the whole website. There are not many opportunities to read about the outer reaches of our scientific understanding of the universe.

In my own group of friends in the U.K. I have been keeping them up to speed with the wonderful and continuing story of Voyager. I usually ask individuals what they were doing in 1977 and lead it in that way. The basic speed and distances covered by Voyager are on a scale that they can grasp and wonder at. Singularities will have to wait for another day!

This is the U.K. where – thanks to the deception of the BBC which reaches far into the population – most people still “believe” that manmade CO2 will lead to catastrophic global warming. Most folk here think that celestial mechanics is the name of a pop group and Milankovitch cycles are two-wheeled personal transports from Eastern Europe.

But I still take friends who will listen patiently through the science. And having a resource such as WUWT is a great support and a continuing insight into scientific enquiry. So from the U.K. – thank you.

bobclose
Reply to  John V. Wright
June 18, 2026 4:31 am

Yes, thanks WUWT for providing a wider scope of science material to digest. Of course, cosmology has had its issues with unsettled science, given the black matter, dark energy and 11-dimentional space/time- all very difficult to prove. So, it’s nice to see some new thinking happening re singularities and black holes.

Stephen Wilde
June 18, 2026 1:02 am

I’ve always been interested in the limits of the observable universe.
Being also interested in weather I often wonder whether the universe as a whole behaves rather like a mass of condensing and evaporating gases.
There would be regions of contraction and regions of expansion adjacent to one another and within expanding regions there would be points of contraction leading to black holes with corresponding white holes being points of expansion within contracting regions. Isaac Asimov once wrote about how things would look differently in a contracting universe with white holes instead of black holes.
Adjacent regions would then have matter leaking between each other via a sort of condensate where matter gets converted to light and back
again as it passes to and fro between regions of expansion and contraction.
I’ve no idea how one would go about describing that mathematically but maybe someone in the cosmological community should try toying with the concept.
We just happen to be living in an expanding region.

Denis
June 18, 2026 1:07 am

“…the event horizon – the boundary around a black hole where nothing can escape.” So so many people make the same statement. Yet the gravitational field escapes, all of it. Angular momentum escapes.

MarkW
Reply to  Denis
June 18, 2026 7:25 am

Gravity doesn’t have mass.
Objects have angular momentum, angular momentum is not something that exists on it’s own.
Saying that angular momentum escapes is like saying red escapes. It’s a nonsensical statement.

Denis
Reply to  MarkW
June 18, 2026 7:33 am

It seems to me that the word “nothing” means exactly that. You are saying that gravity is nothing; frame dragging is nothing? If you mean that nothing that has mass can escape a black hole, then say so. But then, light photons have no mass and cannot escape either.

MarkW
Reply to  Denis
June 18, 2026 8:40 am

No, I’m saying that you are straining at meaningless nits.

Phillip Chalmers
Reply to  Denis
June 18, 2026 4:01 pm

I agree Denis, one theory leading to the evaporation of black holes through the loss of energy by gravitational pathways.
You are like me, remembering that thermodynamics has weird ideas like entropy and enthalpy trying to represent in language and mathematics the “energy” concept connected to the “work” concept.

Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
June 19, 2026 9:22 am

“. . . one theory leading to the evaporation of black holes through the loss of energy by gravitational pathways.”

That’s news to me. The only theory leading to black hole “evaporation” that I know of is via postulated “Hawking radiation” that is fundamentally a quantum mechanical process, not dependent on a “gravitational pathway”.

The step-by-step mechanism proceeds as follows:

Quantum Fluctuations: The vacuum of space is never truly empty; it is constantly boiling with “virtual” particle-antiparticle pairs that spontaneously pop into existence and then immediately annihilate each other. The types of these “virtual particle” pairs have been postulated to include photons, gravitons, neutrinos, and other elementary particles.

Pair Separation: When these pairs form right at the edge of the event horizon, one particle can fall into the black hole while its partner escapes into space.

Negative Energy: To conserve total energy, the particle that falls inside the black hole carries negative energy, while the escaping particle becomes real and radiates away as Hawking radiation.

Mass Loss: The absorption of negative energy decreases the black hole’s mass. Because the rate of this radiation is inversely proportional to the black hole’s mass, smaller black holes evaporate much faster than massive ones. As the black hole shrinks, it gets hotter and radiates at an increasingly accelerating rate, culminating in a final, explosive burst of energy.

The above theoretical explanation originated from Stephen Hawking in 1974. However, due to the great distances involved in telescopically observing EM radiation from even the nearest-to-Earth black hole, we have not yet been able to detect and measure Hawking radiation, so this theory currently lacks empirical support. The fundamental problem is that Hawking radiation is calculated to be incredibly weak for even super-massive black holes and it is easily overwhelmed by cosmic background radiation (noise).

Reply to  Denis
June 19, 2026 8:41 am

“Yet the gravitational field escapes, all of it. Angular momentum escapes.”

A “field” is not something than can “escape”, it is a defined physical parameter extending over physical space, theoretically to infinite distance.

Einstein, in his theory of General Relativity, showed that a gravitational field can be consider as just the distortion of spacetime due to the presence of mass or energy.

On the other hand, angular momentum is a physical parameter arising from mass or energy that is rotating in an inertial reference frame. There is specific scientific recognition that EM photons (such as those of visible light) can have angular momentum resulting from the quantum spin and the rotation between the polarization degrees of freedom of the photon. However, angular momentum is not a field, and although it can vary as a vector quantity it does not “escape’ from any position defined by the associated mass/energy.

It is scientifically acknowledged that black holes have both mass and some degree of spin (or rotation) that can be determined by observation/measurments performed outside of that black hole’s event horizon.

astonerii
Reply to  Denis
June 19, 2026 1:10 pm

Before reaching the event horizon that gravity existed, it is not escaping, it is remaining tethered. A significant difference in view and consequences.

The propagation velocity of gravity is effectively infinite, the propagation velocity of light is limited and specific.

The truth is that light is not factually pulled into a black hole unless it is directly aimed at the black hole, it is just that it’s wavelength is stretched longer and longer up to infinity at which point it factually ceases to exist.

jonesingforozone
June 18, 2026 1:26 am

The discovery of a black hole at the center of our galaxy provided Hawking with the evidence he needed to show that singularities disappear behind an apparent event horizon: Information Preservation and Weather Forecasting for Black Holes.

June 18, 2026 2:55 am

From article:”The idea is that a star becomes infinite once it collapses,…”

If a black hole comes from a star that explodes/collapses the black hole will have less mass than the star did. Why isn’t the star itself a black hole?



Andrew
Reply to  mkelly
June 18, 2026 3:48 am

If the star was concentrated at the center, it would be a black hole. It isn’t so the outer shell of the star produces no gravity within it. That’s right – gravity goes down as you go down inside a body

Reply to  Andrew
June 18, 2026 4:29 am

andrew, your post sparked my memory of an article i read a year or so back. the math used is beyond me but the text should spark anyone’s interest. hope you find it interesting.

https://profoundphysics.com/gravity-underground/

joe

Denis
Reply to  Andrew
June 18, 2026 6:03 am

But you can’t go down since there is no time as time is required for movement.

Reply to  Andrew
June 18, 2026 7:00 am

So does the “gravity goes down” idea gold in a black hole?

MarkW
Reply to  Andrew
June 18, 2026 7:31 am

You should say that net gravity goes down as you descend into an object.
At the center of an object, there is the same amount of mass in all directions, so the sum of all the gravitational vectors equals zero.

It’s not that there is no gravity, it’s that gravitational forces balance.
BTW, even with “no gravity”, pressure still exists.

MarkW
Reply to  mkelly
June 18, 2026 7:29 am

It’s gravity that creates a black hole.
The mass of a star spread out over the area of a star doesn’t concentrate the mass sufficiently to create a black hole.
Once the star collapses during a super nova event, then gravity is concentrated sufficiently.

Phillip Chalmers
Reply to  MarkW
June 18, 2026 4:03 pm

Now genius, tell us what gravity is!

Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
June 19, 2026 9:39 am

It’s what makes what goes up come down? 😎

Reply to  Gunga Din
June 19, 2026 7:16 pm

If what you say was true (i.e. not sarcasm), then satellites could not orbit Earth (or any other planet) in circular trajectories and there would be no such thing as “escape velocities” in astrodynamics.

FYI, at the nominal altitude of ISS (about 400 Km, or 250 miles) the value of Earth’s gravitation acceleration is about 0.89 g, while at the altitude of geostationary satellites (about 35,800 Km, or 22,200 miles) the value of Earth’s gravitational acceleration is about 0.022 g.

IOW, “weightlessness” in space does not necessarily mean the absence of gravity.

ResourceGuy
June 18, 2026 4:06 am

Notice how this article exemplifies real science process of debate and change. Such descriptions and wording are effectively impossible in agenda climate science.

Reply to  ResourceGuy
June 19, 2026 9:46 am

In “climate science”, a blackhole is where inconvenient observations go to die.

Tom Johnson
June 18, 2026 4:29 am

There’s a huge difference between mathematics and physics. Mathematics can be a study using only numbers, while physics (think physical) is a study of actual things. Many things are quite possible using only numbers, while many of these same things are impossible in the real world. With numbers, you can transition from negative infinity to positive infinity over the space of… zero. In the physical world you can’t reach infinity at all. Similarly, some things are impossible in math, too – division by zero is one of those.

Mathematics is necessary and quite useful in describing physics, but it must be accepted that the formulas can break down at extremes. Singularities and infinity are two of those extremes.

Phillip Chalmers
Reply to  Tom Johnson
June 18, 2026 4:25 pm

Exactly. I am in my ninth decade and Physics literate from high school and have only recently discovered that I belong to a group I did not know existed – we are ultra-finitists. I have never been comfortable with calculus using the concept of incremental change then extrapolated to infinitesimal while accepting that an enormous amount of theoretical physics can be modelled by that trick.
It is only now, when computers are never able to do the infinite but can rapidly do calculations of very small but finite increments, can we see that some of the theoretical maths actually got some things wrong.

Denis
June 18, 2026 5:57 am

I believe time slows as the gravitational field in which it is being measured increases. It seems this this article is saying that the Schwarzschild radius is the point beyond which time ceases entirely so there can be no spacetime within, just space. ???

June 18, 2026 6:39 am

Wow, summer solstice on Sunday. 
After wintry months of anticipating the pool opening have made it once.

50 years of marriage, 60 years since high school, son 48 w daughters 5 & 10, PhD daughter 45.
Where did it all go?

Well, “Time is fleeting.” Rocky Horror
We are hurtling back toward the singularity and do not know it.
Expanding, contracting, looks the same.
It’s relative, so I hear.

Galactic ground hog day.

MarkW
June 18, 2026 7:14 am

I’ve been aware that there have always been a lot of physicists who weren’t comfortable with the concept of infinite mass for several decades.
What the author calls complacency, most call an unwillingness to discard all of Einstein’s work, just because of this one issue.

As one put it, “Whenever you see infinity, that’s your math telling you that there is something you don’t understand yet.”

DarrinB
Reply to  MarkW
June 18, 2026 12:06 pm

I’ve read it this way. Physics equations appear to work up until the even horizon then start breaking down past that point. The why isn’t known so keep following Einstein until something that works better comes along.

Reply to  MarkW
June 19, 2026 9:34 am

“I’ve been aware that there have always been a lot of physicists who weren’t comfortable with the concept of infinite mass for several decades.”

That’s good thing! There is no physicist worth the title that would be comfortable with infinite mass.

Infinite mass is not a requirement for, or a consequence of, the existence of black holes in our universe.

If there was such a thing as infinite mass, our whole universe would be a black hole (more likely a point singularity) and we—as well as everything else—would simply not exist.

MarkW
June 18, 2026 7:20 am

So far, no trolls whining that this subject has nothing to do with climate.

1saveenergy
Reply to  MarkW
June 18, 2026 12:39 pm

But …. this subject has nothing to do with climate. !!!

 I’m a troll, fol de roll, and I’ll eat you for supper ! (:-))

paul courtney
Reply to  MarkW
June 19, 2026 3:52 am

Mr. W: Well, obviously the singularity-deniers at this site just can’t handle the truth!
/s/

John Hultquist
June 18, 2026 8:17 am

People use the term “infinite” as a place on the number line. It isn’t. It is a concept.
A great read: “Eli Maor’s To Infinity and Beyond: A …”

Reply to  John Hultquist
June 18, 2026 11:19 am

I thought that was “Toy Story.”

Reply to  Phil R
June 19, 2026 10:10 am

Some people like to play with the concept so …

Randle Dewees
June 18, 2026 12:51 pm

As the onion peels…

Phillip Chalmers
June 18, 2026 3:47 pm

Back up. The original awareness that there were regions of space which had horizons from which neither electromagnetic rays or particulate matter could escape an inward gravitational pull was theoretical and then discovered by astronomical exploration.
Then the naming began, and then people took the names more seriously than the phenomenon.
The greatest error was the mind fart that these patches of spacetime were identical to the theoretically posited origin of all of spacetime.
Remember, the “consensus” was of an infinite universe in a steady state and the first assertions that it was expanding based on observations was mocked, the “big bang” label was put on the theory by contemptuous pundits caught in the old idea.
Just to get started, how many dimensions does the universe possess?
If I understand correctly from “elementary” particle physics so far between 7 and 11 have been needed to make the maths work down to the level of the quark.
Plenty we do not know yet. Forget “singularity”, another idea from last century and before like phlogiston and miasma.

Jeff Alberts
June 18, 2026 8:09 pm

Personally I think this is a lot of navel gazing. By the time we get anywhere near a black hole to properly study it, all of our current knowledge will be laughable.

Reply to  Jeff Alberts
June 20, 2026 7:50 am

Well, with the Jame Webb Space Telescope we are currently “studying” a supermassive black hole that is located in the ancient galaxy GN-z11 that is roughly 13.4 billion light-years distant from Earth.

As but one example of properly “studying” black holes, JWST measures the mass of such primarily using NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph) to analyze how fast gas orbits the black hole. By breaking the infrared light into a rainbow spectrum, astronomers track the extreme gravitational pull shifting the light frequencies.

JWST also has the ability to determine the spin (total angular momentum) of a remote black hole.

GeorgeInSanDiego
June 19, 2026 12:28 am

I’m a big fan of two recent papers in the field of cosmology. One is by Lucas Lombriser; who asserts that Einstein’s original surmise that the universe is “flat” is correct, and that the apparent expansion of the universe is an artifact of the decay of particles over time. The other is by Rajendra Gupta; who asserts that the accepted age of the universe based on the wavelength of the cosmic microwave background fails to properly account for the phenomenon of tired light, and that the universe is much closer to 26 billion years old than it is to 14 billion years old. Gupta further asserts that the search for dark matter and dark energy are fools errands because they do not exist, and that their existence is no more necessary to explain the attributes of the universe than a luminiferous ether is necessary to explain the propagation of light.

astonerii
Reply to  GeorgeInSanDiego
June 19, 2026 1:20 pm

Wow, my personal without evidence theories have some backing from real scientists! Good to hear. I think red shift is from space sapping the lights energy, giving a false sense of expansion. I never bought the idea of an ever expanding universe, specifically one that expanded infinitely fast at first and then slowed down.

Reply to  astonerii
June 20, 2026 8:09 am

“. . . one that expanded infinitely fast . . .”

As my undergraduate professor teaching calculus observed, anyone talking as if “infinity” was a real, understandable thing has no idea what he/she is talking about.

Reply to  GeorgeInSanDiego
June 20, 2026 8:03 am

Fortunately, the scientific method that has served humanity so well does not just accept “assertions” but also requires:
a) supporting evidence based on factual data/observations,
b) that any proposed theory makes one or more testable predictions, and
c) that the proposed evidence and/or predictions can be independently tested and verified by other scientists.

June 20, 2026 10:08 am

“Stephen Hawking took the same kind of reasoning and turned it the other way, applying it not to a single collapsing star but to the whole universe, running backwards in time, and arrived at the same place. A beginning that traces back to a singularity of its own.”

I’ve thought for a long time that the Big Bang theory was wrong. It’s a purely mathematical exercise attempting to explain Edwin Hubble’s observation, published in 1929, that galaxies are moving away from each other and the further away they are (from us, and from each other), the faster they appear to be moving away. The physical explanation is that the universe is expanding, and the easiest analogy to grasp is an explosion, like from a bomb. But nowhere do we see a bomb exploding then continuing to accelerate matter away from the center of the explosion. What drives that expansion? Gravity attracts so eventually everything should contract, but it does the opposite, and it appears to be accelerating. And the theorized initial “explosion” from a singularity defies known physics thus the postulated “cosmic inflation” that mysteriously inflated the universe by 10^26 times in 10^-35 seconds in the earliest moments of the big bang. Of course “known physics” implies there are physical processes yet to be discovered. Singularities at the heart of black holes and the Big Bang theory demonstrate the limits of knowledge we’ve run into.

Is accelerating expansion simply a defining characteristic of a universe? Are there multiple universes? Is energy emerging into the universe from “outside” to drive the expansion? Fun to speculate. I just don’t see the Big Bang theory as a plausible explanation for the existence of the known universe and its apparent accelerating expansion.