Michael Clarage: Galactic Rotation Curves
Thunderbolts Project
9 Feb 2026
Science calculates the rotation curves of galaxies by looking at how atomic lines are shifted. Many galaxies have the what is called “flat” rotation curve, which most all funded astrophysicists claim is evidence for the theory of dark matter. However, the known physics of twisted Birkeland Currents predict galactic rotation curves.
Galaxies are concentrated along gigantic filaments that span the entire Universe. There are thousands of little specs in these strands, and each spec is a galaxy—with rotating filaments.
The whole thing is fractal. Giant cosmic filaments carry an electrical charge, which cause them to rotate and have flat rotation curves. That current splits into filaments which form galaxies—also rotating in a similar fashion, although on a much smaller scale.
Astrophysicist Michael Clarage, PhD, analyzes the data we actually collect and shares his explanation on how galaxies rotate.
See also:
Calculating Cosmic Electric Currents using the Carlqvist Relation

