raisinoids
Raisinoids are a hypothetical class of celestial objects that have been proposed as a potential explanation for certain astronomical observations. The concept of raisinoids emerged from discussions about the nature of dark matter and the early universe. The core idea suggests that if the universe was initially filled with a substance that behaved like a fluid containing raisins, and this fluid then expanded and cooled, the raisins might represent early concentrations of matter that could eventually form galaxies or other cosmic structures. This analogy helps to visualize how initial inhomogeneities in a primordial medium could seed the formation of larger structures through gravitational attraction as the universe expands. The "raisins" themselves would not necessarily be literal raisins, but rather regions of higher density within a less dense background. While the raisinoid concept is illustrative, it is not a widely accepted or mainstream cosmological model. Current cosmological models, such as the Lambda-CDM model, provide a framework for understanding structure formation that relies on dark matter and dark energy without invoking a specific "raisinoid" analogy. Nevertheless, the raisinoid idea has served as a useful conceptual tool for some scientists to think about the initial conditions of the universe and the processes that led to the cosmic web we observe today.