Quote:
debaser
your quote regarding black holes. Scientists claim that in the very centre of the galaxy is a giant black hole, which, along with all the little black holes, suck matter, energy, pretty much anything that comes too close. According to Newton Magazine, white holes are not a local phenomenon, but exist in ares of space that are too cluttered to examine thoroughly.
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By local I was refering not to objects nearby, but rather a definable point, which is absent in the case of a "white hole", ie local vs. global (or in this case universal).
The matter at the center of galaxies in general is not coming out of nowhere. It is, in many cases, moving inward toward what are theorized to be supermassive black holes. The acceleration and condensation of this matter can itself form stars in addition to the ones being pulled towards the center already. Even in cases not involving black holes the tidal forces at the center of a galaxy can create stars rapidly (< a million years). These stars don't live very long, as they are usually the victims of collisions or the same gravity that formed them.
Unfortunately a star cannot survive being pulled into a black hole, it is a long process, and it invariably destroys the star. Therefore it would be highly unlikely to discover an object that ejected whole stars (if you were implying that in your first post, you may not have been).