How are White holes formed?

Photon in a very confusing phenomenon. It is some times a particle and some times a wave. A photon is the most complicated particle in the history of particular physics. Here is a radical idea through which I attempt to describe and finish the confusion of what is a photon. Where do we commonly find photons in our universe? Near any light emitting object. These photons, as per me, are actually waves – light waves. But the moment they come in contact with any physical object, they turn into particles. Here is a radical idea that describes how a photon could lead to the formation of a white hole. White holes are basically passages like black holes, but unlike black holes, they reflect light and throw out things instead of pulling in. These photons may be lighting up the surfaces of black holes and as they pass through them, they must be colliding with another lit up object in the black hole. This constant activity of collision and ejection may be forming anti-gravity. This is how, I think, the white holes are formed.


How I got to this conclusion?
White holes, they are the mathematical opposite of black holes. When we literally take the description in such a way, there arises a question how was the white hole formed and what does it have to do with black holes. As light particles enter the event horizon, the idea struck me that the photon in its journey to the centre of the black hole sucks away some mass from the black hole as it is emitting energy. What better can explain a white hole than this changed particles causing a rip in the other side of the black hole.

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