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  2. List of largest cosmic structures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_cosmic...

    Consists of at least 15 clusters plus other interconnected filaments. It is the most massive galaxy supercluster discovered so far. [19] Big Ring (2024) 1,300,000,000 Made up of galaxy clusters. (Theoretical limit) 1,200,000,000 Structures larger than this size are incompatible with the cosmological principle according to all estimates. However ...

  3. List of largest stars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_stars

    Luminous red novae appear to expand extremely rapidly, reaching thousands to tens of thousands of solar radii within only a few months, significantly larger than the largest red supergiants. [ 2 ] Some studies use models that predict high-accreting Population III or Population I supermassive stars (SMSs) in the very early universe could have ...

  4. Expansion of the universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expansion_of_the_universe

    Because the universe is expanding, is smaller in the past and larger in the future. Extrapolating back in time with certain cosmological models will yield a moment when the scale factor was zero; our current understanding of cosmology sets this time at 13.787 ± 0.020 billion years ago. If the universe continues to expand forever, the scale ...

  5. Webb telescope confirms the universe is expanding at an ...

    www.aol.com/news/webb-telescope-confirms...

    Two years of data from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope have now validated the Hubble Space Telescope's earlier finding that the rate of the universe's expansion is faster - by about 8% - than ...

  6. List of largest galaxies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_galaxies

    Listed below are galaxies with diameters greater than 700,000 light-years. This list uses the mean cosmological parameters of the Lambda-CDM model based on results from the 2015 Planck collaboration, where H 0 = 67.74 km/s/Mpc, Ω Λ = 0.6911, and Ω m = 0.3089. [3]

  7. Universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe

    The observable universe is isotropic on scales significantly larger than superclusters, meaning that the statistical properties of the universe are the same in all directions as observed from Earth. The universe is bathed in highly isotropic microwave radiation that corresponds to a thermal equilibrium blackbody spectrum of roughly 2.72548 ...

  8. Observable universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe

    Because of the universe's expansion, there may be some later age at which a signal sent from the same galaxy can never reach the Earth at any point in the infinite future, so, for example, we might never see what the galaxy looked like 10 billion years after the Big Bang, [19] even though it remains at the same comoving distance less than that ...

  9. The universe is getting hotter as it gets older — here’s why

    www.aol.com/universe-getting-hotter-gets-older...

    The cosmic web — ribbons of gas and dust tying galaxies together — are the largest structures in the Universe, and a new study shows they are growing hotter over time.. Utilizing a phenomenon ...