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Supermassive Spinning Black Holes

It's important to understand that a black hole is not the star itself. The event horizon results from the star's gravity, while the remnants of the star reside near the theoretical singularity.

How fast can a black hole (BH) spin? Is there a limit to frame dragging? As a result of spin in a supermassive black hole, could a star be geometrically forced into a torus shape rather than a singularity? Could the ultimate spin of a toroidal structure frame drag enough to cut its connection to spacetime?

If a spinning torus were suddenly freed in Euclidean-dimensioned space, would its centrifugal energy cause inflation? Would it simulate a black hole in reverse? Could this lead to the creation of a new universe? As it expanded, would its spin decrease? At a radius of about 7 billion light-years, would the curvature cause the slowdown to be accelerated as the gravitational curvature of the torus or sphere dominated? Would the curvature, similar to gravity wells but reversed, become more "attractive, "speeding up the expansion?

Are we just beyond the spin slowdown of our universe? Can spin be determined by a flattening at the poles? Are differences in spin influenced by varying directions of observation? Can a connection be made with the Hubble Tension? Could such a process represent a continuum where a feeding black hole in one universe causes expansion in another as an ongoing process?

What do you think? Let me know!
I am using a tornado as an analogy.
 

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