NEW PARADIGM Black Holes are equipped with a heavy compressed Higgs particle nucleus. They come in all sizes: micro: Ball lightning, Comet nuclei, (dual) Sunspots, dual Herbig Haro objects and macro: dual Galaxy anchor black holes and dual Galaxy cluster black holes. In between these dual black hole systems ionized gas is compressed into star forming regions.
This Hubble Space Telescope composite image shows a ghostly "ring" of "dark matter point sources"in the galaxy cluster Cl 0024+17
Why is this dark matter spheroid, shaped like a rugby ball (prolate) and not like a grape fruit (oblate)?
Is there a connection with single elliptical Galaxies, which are also mostly prolate?
The reason seems to be that most Galaxy anchor black holes (GABHs: dark matter) turn out to accelerate and cooperate (pair) after being splintered from the evaporating big bang black hole.
They seem to be paired in BH tandems of the same mammoth size, but in contrast with mainstream physics, pushed away from each other by SOFT X-RAY producing ELECTRON SYNCHROTRON JETS, originated by the peculiar Higgs vacuum deformation and the star forming region in the middle of this dumbbell system!
After the merging and grouping of lots of simple galaxies, Galaxy clusters emerge.
As a result the number of elliptical Galaxy increases by concentration of the Galaxy anchor black holes located outside these merging Galaxies.
The ring of Galaxy Anchor Black Holes (dark matter) as we see it now in this prolate shaped image, is populated by variable sized tandems of GABHs.
The largest sized lack hole tandems are supposed to be pushed the most out of the system and as a result be located at both summits of the prolate rugby ball.
The oblateness of the Sun is supposed to be the result of a dual system of Stellar Anchor Black Holes (Leo Vuyk)
Astronomical support for the electron jets between two mammoth black holes, ( see image) is found in the existence of so called WHIM filaments which are the origin of the radial rise of soft X-ray excess, found inside the brightness profile of galaxy clusters. See: SOFT X-RAY EXCESS OF CLUSTERS: A TERMAL FILAMENT MODEL ETC. By: Richard Lieu and Massimiliano Bonamente, March 17 2009.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0903/0903.3066v1.pdf
M31 Andromeda with external GABHs mostly inside Globular clusters or dwarf galaxies.
The largest black holes are located at largest distances from the galaxy