This Black Hole Is So Massive, It Could Contain Our Entire Universe

Somewhere in the deepest image James Webb has ever taken, thousands of galaxies are quietly turning. By every rule we have, they should spin in random directions. They don't. Far too many turn the same way, and one explanation for that points somewhere staggering: that everything we can see might be sitting inside a black hole. In this video, we follow that anomaly all the way down. We break down the real JWST finding, the singularity that both the Big Bang and every black hole supposedly hide, and the "bounce" idea that could delete it. We get into the two mechanisms physicists have proposed for that bounce, why a spinning black hole could hand its spin to a universe born inside it, and the dizzying possibility that every black hole in our sky is hiding a cosmos of its own. ▀▀▀▀▀▀ Timestamps: 0:00 Black Hole 0:42 The Anomaly 3:58 The Singularity and the Bounce 8:05 The Two Bounces, and the Spin That Connects Back 11:52 Turtles All the Way Down 15:26 Where the Science Actually Stands ▀▀▀▀▀▀ Fexl Spanish:    / @fexl_es   Fexl Portuguese:    / @fexlpt   Fexl Ukraine:    / @fexl_ua