Hold Onto Your Brain: Astronomers Have Discovered That Universe Is Far Bigger Than We Thought, And It Has 10x More Galaxies
With the
help of saved data from numerous deep space images from the Hubble Space
Telescope and other telescopes, an international group of researchers led by
Christopher Conselice from the University of Nottingham, UK, formed a 3D map of
the known universe.
Mathematical
models helped to compute for galaxies current telescopes cannot yet observe at
the moment. These disclosed that, to make sense of the numbers and the maps,
about 90% of galaxies are far, far away and too weak to be observed openly.
The map reconstructs,
as perfectly as possible, diverse times in the universe’s history as far back
in times as 13 billion years in its past. Therefore, when the cosmos was some
billion years younger than today, it had 10 more galaxies per unit volume.
Galaxies decline in number (and rise in size) as the billion years go by.
Conselice explains “This gives us a verification of the so-called top-down
formation of structure in the universe,”
This helps
answer Olbers’ Paradox (why the night sky is still dark, even with the billions
of stars). The uncountable stars inside the billions of galaxies are
imperceptible to the human eye because of redshifting of light, the cosmos’s
dynamic nature, and interstellar dust and gas absorbing light. This keeps the
night sky mostly dark.
Conselice
explains further:
“It boggles
the mind that over 90% of the galaxies in the universe have yet to be studied.
Who knows what interesting properties we will find when we observe these
galaxies with the next generation of telescopes,”
The growth
of more progressive space telescopes in the future, starting with the James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST) in 2018, would definitely help us see the
observable cosmos clearly. Who knows what remains lurking just by that expanded
frontier of space.
In any case,
a larger known universe means an even wider space to accommodate the search for
possible extraterrestrial life. Why not? Every time we think that we understand
more of it, the universe seems to always surprise us with more.
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