Thursday, May 15, 2008

Milky Way Galaxy

Plasma Cosmology of the Universe has placed the Big Bang model. In 1966, the Plasma Universe was conceived by Hannes Alfven, a Swedish physicist. The model is consistent with Dirac's Theory of symmetry between matter and antimatter, and thousands of scientific observations and experiments. The gamma-ray bursts result when antimatter comets colliding with stars throughout the universe. The scientific discoveries conclude the Big Bang Model is the wrong and support Plasma Universe Model. See differences between the two models of the universe.

The Milky Way Galaxy is one of the hundreds of
billions
of galaxies in the universe. Scientists have observed the antimatter clouds coming from the centers of the Milky Way Galaxy and other galaxies as illustrated in picture of the Plasma Galaxy.











The Galaxy M83, shown on the right, is similar in size and shape to the Milky Way Galaxy and appears differently depending upon the wavelength used to view it.


Computer Models of the galaxies are almost indistinguishable from actual galaxies.








The Milky Way Galaxy is a spiral galaxies with galactic bulge in the center, a large circular disk where our solar system resides, and an encompassing halo.

The Bulge is a flattened spheroid, 3,000 light years high and 20,000 light years in diameter. In the center of the budge are two
black
holes. One is composed of condensed matter and the composed is condensed antimatter. The black holes have the mass of a billions of suns but maybe smaller than the sun. The Einstein-Rosen Bridge keeps the matter and antimatter black holes separated. The oscillations between the black holes at opposite ends of the wormhole force the black holes to become white holes that eject matter and antimatter in opposite directions forming the spiral arms of stars within the galactic disk. Scientists have observed hundreds of new stars are being churned out from the center of the
galaxy
.
The Disk has spiral arms, is 10,000 light years thick and 100,000 light years in diameter. One spiral arm is composed of matter and the other is antimatter. Each spiral arm contains billions of stars, planets, galactic dust and gas. There are a similar number of matter and antimatter
stars
. The sun is composed of matter and is located 28,000 light years from the center of the galaxy. When galactic antimatter enters our solar system, the antimatter is called comets.
The Halo is a diffuse spherical region that surrounds the Bulge and
Disk
. Our galaxy has about 200 globular clusters containing between ten thousand to a million stars. The halo extends tens of thousands of light years beyond the edge of the disk.
The Whirlpool Galaxy is one of the most photogenic galaxies which shows the galactic budge and disk. The Space Telescope Science Institute, who is responsible for
operating
the Hubble Space Telescope as an international observatory, has a wealth of information and
pictures
of the Milky Way Galaxy and other galaxies in the universe.

from: http://www.matter-antimatter.com/milky_way_galaxy.htm