This paper investigates a statistically significant correlation between specific cosmological descriptions found in the Quran—specifically within Surah An-Najm (The Star) and Surah At-Takwir (The Overthrowing)—and modern astrophysical models of stellar evolution and Black Hole mechanics, specifically the Kerr metric. By employing a rigorous "Root-Based Kinetic Analysis" (RBKA), the study isolates specific philological terms—Hawa (Void-bound Collapse), Kuwirat (Spherical Compression), and Tadalla (Elongated Suspension)—that describe high-energy gravitational phenomena with a precision exceeding the epistemic capacity of the 7th-century pre-telescopic era. The research posits that these Quranic verses do not present a metaphysical allegory, but rather a technical record of a physical "Singularity Traversal Event" experienced by the Prophet Muhammad. We demonstrate that the narrative sequence maps isomorphically onto the topology of a rotating Black Hole: initiating with a stellar collapse trigger, proceeding through frame-dragging dynamics consistent with the Ergosphere, and culminating in a controlled passage through a dual-horizon structure. The study argues that the Quranic text functions as a preserved "observational log" of a physical journey that offers solutions to current paradoxes regarding biological survival within high-gravity zones.
Amine Fitouri (Fri,) studied this question.