Wormholes are among the strangest ideas in modern physics. They are often imagined as tunnels through space that could connect distant parts of the Universe. In science fiction, wormholes are used for fast travel between galaxies. But in real science, they are mathematical solutions that come from Albert Einstein’s theory of General Relativity. Now, physicist Mikhail Volkov has developed new models of spinning wormholes that show some surprising behavior. These wormholes can rotate, grow larger because of centrifugal force, and under certain conditions even imitate black holes. The research focuses on a special type of object called a “ring wormhole.” This wormhole comes from the famous Kerr solution, which normally describes a rotating black hole. When the mass of the Kerr black hole is reduced to zero, something unusual remains behind: a wormhole with a ring-shaped structure. Even though the space around it is locally flat, the overall shape of spacetime is very unusual. The wormhole...