I believe this swirl towards the gravity in the black hole would cause the local gases to condense and form into planets and stars as we know it. This is seen on many films and documentaries if you look it up. What I heard last, they believe the black holes go dormant after awhile and can start feeding once again.
I believe that these black holes forever feed and spin our universe just as the eye of a hurricane spins in the ocean without land. Now Most hurricanes spawn off tornados. If we think of each solar system as it's own tornado then maybe this could mean more.
Now with string theory they talk of strings that make up atoms and everything in the Universe. I was thinking that possibly instead of strings it would more resemble a swirl of some gas or "anything" that would condense to form atoms just as gases have condensed to form our planets and stars. Maybe this swirl (hurricanes) that we see on Earth, that takes energy from the equator to feed the other hemispheres, could explain the same swirl we see in space that might be spreading energy to the rest of space to keep it expanding as it does.
I'm not a physicist, obviously, but I believe If you look at each solar system as if you were looking at a swirling hurricane you would see the resemblance. They say the stars further away from the center of the galaxy spin at a slower rate than stars closer to the center. Wind speeds in a hurricane is what it reminds me of.
The hurricane picks up clouds wind and water to feed and fuel it's growth and life. I believe that if a black hole was given birth by a "tropical gaseous depression then it would soon start swirling and gathering up debris and gases in space as it gathers strength to feed itself. Now on earth we don't know what happens to a hurricane after it reaches it's strongest point and doesn't get impeded by land or wind. In space, perhaps it stays at a constant state as Rita stayed close to 5 before weakening over shallower water.
In space these eyes of the storm could keep the universe in a constant swirl toward the center and swallowing up everything in the center to..."no one knows".
So if the galaxy was created by a black hole it would swirl like a hurricane causing mini tornados ("swirling gases") that would make gases swirl into smaller tornados creating solar systems which would cause gases to swirl into smaller tornados that would create planets and perhaps they spin off smaller tornados, then maybe these swirls get even smaller to condense and create atoms.
Also, I am wondering, if the water is at a lower lever in the eye of a hurricane because of the pressure it pushes down, then would not the same type of pressure from a swirling cloud of gas put a warp in space?
So instead of thinking some huge mass is condensed into a particle that's microscopic, we could think of a black hole as more of a pressure from the eye pushing on the rift of space that causes the deep cavern that has so much gravity it sucks up everything.
Now where do the winds of a hurricane go once they reach the inner ring of the eye? This I don't know. Could it explain where light and everything goes in a black hole?
So are these strings everyone is looking for actually swirls like a hurricane?
If so, I am the first, I believe to say these swirls we see in Hurricanes and in galaxies across the Universe are similar and very important to finding more answers of why these large swirls appear.
So if any physicists are out there please let me know if it makes sense that tiny swirling "something" could condense to create atoms. Atoms are round like planets aren't they?
Also, maybe the five string theories could not have been mirror theories but "bands" of the storm leading the eye.
If we find "the swirl" is what condensed our planets, solar system, and universe, then why not go as tiny as atoms.
Just my two cents.
But, isn't the swirling of a hurricane the result of the Coriolis effect? Wind flows to the low, not high, pressure at the storm center, the swirling being caused by the Coriolis effect.
Weirdly, a quick Google shows quite a few articles on the similarity between hurricane and galaxy spirals.
I found unexpectedly that the Milky Way has a 27,000 light year in length bar in the center?
Apparently the spiral is a regularly appearing phenomenon in nature.