G'day from the land of ozzzzzz
Its not a fantasy theory. I'm fully aware of the standard star formation theories and ssome of the alternative theories.
Do not limit yourself to what you know.
Google for
Compact matter and jet formation
Black holes and jet formation
Evidence that powerful radio jets have a profound influence on the evolution of galaxies
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0409687
Authors: S. Rawlings, M. J. Jarvis
(Submitted on 28 Sep 2004)
Abstract: The relationships between supermassive black holes and the properties of their associated dark-matter halos imply that outflows from accreting black holes provide a feedback mechanism regulating galaxy formation. Accreting black holes with weak or undetectable radio jets (radio-quiet quasars) outnumber those with powerful jets (radio-loud quasars) by a factor ~10-100, so powerful-jet outflows are often neglected. However, whenever powerful jets are triggered, there is a dramatic (factor >100) step-function increase in the efficiency of feedback. We use a feedback model, together with the measured space density of flat-spectrum radio-loud quasars, to show that a powerful-jet episode probably occurred in every protocluster in the Universe. Before jet triggering, there was time for gravitational collapse to create many (~10-100) surrounding protogalaxies massive enough to host radio-quiet quasars. After triggering, the powerful jet pushes back and heats ionized gas so that it cannot fall onto these protogalaxies and cool. Once neutral/molecular gas reservoirs become exhausted, there is a synchronized shut down in both star-formation and black-hole activity throughout the protocluster. These considerations imply that radio-loud quasars have a profound influence on the evolution of all the galaxies seen in clusters today.
Using SKA to observe relativistic jets from X-ray binary systems
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0409464
Authors: R. Fender (Amsterdam)
(Submitted on 20 Sep 2004)
Abstract: I briefly outline our current observational understanding of the relativistic jets observed from X-ray binary systems, and how their study may shed light on analogous phenomena in Active Galactic Nuclei and Gamma Ray Bursts. How SKA may impact on this field is sketched, including the routine tracking of relativistic ejections to large distances from the binaries, detecting and monitoring the radio counterparts to 'quiescent' black holes, and detecting the radio counterparts of the brightest X-ray binaries throughout the Local Group of galaxies.
At this moment I'm just learning how it works. It will take me a few more years to understand just a bit more.
Harry : Smile and live another day.