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Using data from space telescopes and other instruments, astronomers, cosmologists, and astrophysicists are able to deduce and ...
“The cosmic microwave background is in the back of everything we see in the universe. It’s the edge of the observable universe,” Simone Ferraro, a co-author of the study from Lawrence ...
Astronomers may have found the long-missing half of the universe's regular matter—and it appears to have been right under our ...
which stretches out for around 10% of the total width of the entire observable universe. "Since the most distant extent of the Hercules-Corona Borealis Great Wall is hard to verify, the most ...
"The cosmic microwave background is in the back of everything we see in the universe. It's the edge of the observable universe," Ferraro said. "So you can use that as a backlight to see where the ...
“The cosmic microwave background is in the back of everything we see in the universe. It’s the edge of the observable universe,” Simone Ferraro, a co-author of the study from Lawrence Berkeley ...
Interestingly, this value is close to the maximum allowed so that the rotational speed does not exceed the speed of light at the edges of the observable universe. Antennae Galaxies. Credit: NASA, ESA, ...
A never-before-seen image of the cosmic microwave background, combining data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and ...