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In 2012, an Argentinian man named Pablo Carlos Budassi created an infographic and artistic representation of the Observable Universe. Since then, the image has captured the imagination of astronomy ...
The observable universe is just a fraction of the vast cosmos, limited by the speed of light and the age of the universe. But what lies beyond this visible horizon? In this video, we delve into ...
However, we do know that the universe is larger than 93 billion light-years across. This is the diameter of the sphere of the “observable universe” that we find ourselves at the center of.
There’s a point in the universe where no light, no signal, and no matter can reach us — or so we thought. Galaxy clusters are drifting in one direction, as if pulled by something beyond our ...
The colored band in this illustration shows the time period in the history of the universe that the new images capture.
The James Webb Space Telescope has found perhaps its most profound discovery to date. The uncovered preferred direction for galaxies supports the idea that the universe was born in a black hole.
In 'groundbreaking' study, astronomers detect record number of stars in distant galaxy Astronomers used the James Webb Space Telescope to spot 44 stars halfway across the universe - a record ...
An illustration of the cosmic web, the universe’s large-scale structure of composed of galaxy-rich clumps and filaments alongside giant intergalactic voids mostly bereft of matter. At even ...
We may never know – and the universe may not even have an edge. But here’s what we do know.
The Milky Way is just a speck in a universe filled with an untold number of galaxies. But if we had to take an educated guess, how many galaxies are in the universe?
In a sense, we are at the centre of the universe – but only because we can see the same distance in every direction, giving us the perfectly spherical observable universe.