Wednesday, January 09, 2013

Dwarf Galaxy Formation in between Galaxy Anchor Black Holes (Clumpy Dark Matter) according to Quantum FFF- Theory.


See also:






For Dwarf Galaxy dark matter embedding see also:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/1201.4728v1.pdf
Globular Clusters seem to have no Dark Matter Halos,
 but central concentration of Dark Matter..
see: THIS

ALSO THE SUN SHOUL HAVE at least TWO massless STELLAR ANCHOR BLACK HOLES (SABHs)!



 



Messier 106 with two extra "arms" of hot x-ray emitting gas possibly in connection with the GABHs!


The observed Fermion repulsion around "new" black holes is originated by the propeller shape of Fermions. In combination with the oscillating Higgs vacuum structure around the black hole horizon., which induces Fermion polarisation and acceleration away from the black hole.









How Three speakers at the Higgs symposium seem to hint into the direction of Quantum FFF Theory!! Including
1: that fermions are composite particles
2:Magnetic monopole field particles,
3: Cosmological inflation ( expansion) is driven by the evaporation of the BB black Hole Higgs particles forming the oscillating Higgs vacuum lattice.
See the Strassler report below:


Day 2 of Higgs Symposium.
Strassler in Edinburg 10-01-2013.

Riccardo Rattazzi (professor at EPFL in Lausanne, who has shown up on this blog a couple of times before, here and here) then gave a beautiful talk about the possibility that the Higgs particle is a composite object, the way the proton is a composite object made from smaller things.  This possibility is now highly constrained, but not ruled out yet; for it to work presumably requires that the matter particles of the world (the quarks and leptons) are partly composite (meaning they are mixtures of elementary particles and composite particles.

Sir Michael Atiyah, one of the world’s great mathematicians, whose work has had enormous influence in physics, gave a talk about the relationships between Higgs phenomena and solitons — in particular, magnetic monopoles, instantons and Skyrmions.

That was yesterday.  As for today (Wednesday) 
 Misha Shaposhnikov, one of Rattazzi’s colleagues at EPFL, who with Christof Wetterich suggested a scenario that predicts a Standard Model Higgs with a mass in roughly the 123-135 GeV/c² range, gave arguments in favor of his prediction, discussed its implications, and talked about whether it would allow the Higgs to serve as the driver of cosmological inflation (which is the rapid expansion of the early universe thought to explain why the universe is so uniform and geometrically flat