The universe's big hole.

Urederra

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... and it has to be in the constellation Eridanus... :mischief:

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Huge Hole Found in the Universe​
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The universe has a huge hole in it that dwarfs anything else of its kind. The discovery caught astronomers by surprise.

The hole is nearly a billion light-years across. It is not a black hole, which is a small sphere of densely packed matter. Rather, this one is mostly devoid of stars, gas and other normal matter, and it's also strangely empty of the mysterious "dark matter" that permeates the cosmos. Other space voids have been found before, but nothing on this scale.

Astronomers don't know why the hole is there.

"Not only has no one ever found a void this big, but we never even expected to find one this size," said researcher Lawrence Rudnick of the University of Minnesota.

Rudnick's colleague Liliya R. Williams also had not anticipated this finding.

"What we've found is not normal, based on either observational studies or on computer simulations of the large-scale evolution of the universe," said Williams, also of the University of Minnesota.

The finding will be detailed in the Astrophysical Journal.

The universe is populated with visible stars, gas and dust, but most of the matter in the universe is invisible. Scientists know something is there, because they can measure the gravitational effects of the so-called dark matter. Voids exist, but they are typically relatively small.

The gargantuan hole was found by examining observations made using the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope, funded by the National Science Foundation.

There is a "remarkable drop in the number of galaxies" in a region of sky in the constellation Eridanus, Rudnick said.

The region had been previously been dubbed the "WMAP Cold Spot," because it stood out in a map of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation made by NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotopy Probe (WMAP) satellite. The CMB is an imprint of radiation left from the Big Bang, the theoretical beginning of the universe.

"Although our surprising results need independent confirmation, the slightly colder temperature of the CMB in this region appears to be caused by a huge hole devoid of nearly all matter roughly 6 to 10 billion light-years from Earth," Rudnick said.

Photons of the CMB gain a small amount of energy when they pass through normal regions of space with matter, the researchers explained. But when the CMB passes through a void, the photons lose energy, making the CMB from that part of the sky appear cooler.

So, computational simulations also failed to predict this.
I have an account at the supercomputer in the MSI at the University of Minnesota, I'll top it to see what programs are running related to astrophysics over there.

Not much to discuss... any thoughts, explanations, theories?

linky, linky, link
 
"What we've found is not normal,

Nothing is "normal" in space. We keep finding new strange different things all the time.
 
Right, I have a theory.

Could it possibly been caused by a very large unstable black hole?
 
Right, I have a theory.

Could it possibly been caused by a very large unstable black hole?

It's a billion light years across. That's 10 times larger than our galaxy.

That would have been a hell of a black hole - and we would have detected such a thing.
 
Right, I have a theory.

Could it possibly been caused by a very large unstable black hole?

I don't think so. And the article discards that possibility. A black hole is full of matter and distorts the space around it. This is just the huge nothingness, no galaxies, no gas, no dark matter, no anything, just void.
 
God was meaning to put stuff there but decided to do a botch job and have a rest and a nice cup of tea on day 7.
 
Odd. Could this be the end result of a minute anomily in the big bang. Kind of like a tiny imperfection in the nozzel of a spray-can leaves a huge distortion of paint on a wall, could a tiny imperfection in the origines of the universe leave a huge distortion such as this?

If so what could the nature of the distortion have been?
 
It's the true intelligent life out there that we've been looking for. :run:

They're so advanced they already have several galaxies under their control. :run:

And they cover their entire domain with this hyper-advanced cloaking system so nobody else can see them. :run:
 
It's the true intelligent life out there that we've been looking for. :run:

They're so advanced they already have several galaxies under their control. :run:

And they cover their entire domain with this hyper-advanced cloaking system so nobody else can see them. :run:

Thoses are realy dumb aliens, considering we managed to detect the anomoly with our puny technology...:mischief:
 
Thoses are realy dumb aliens, considering we managed to detect the anomoly with our puny technology...:mischief:

technology which they're coming to "confiscate" now.

good job scientists. you doomed us all.
 
I always imagined that the end of the universe would be made of bricks.:crazyeye:

Don't ask why.
 
Odd. Could this be the end result of a minute anomily in the big bang. Kind of like a tiny imperfection in the nozzel of a spray-can leaves a huge distortion of paint on a wall, could a tiny imperfection in the origines of the universe leave a huge distortion such as this?

If so what could the nature of the distortion have been?

That's an interesting idea. Though how could we detect this void though if all sorts of other stuff was in the way? To see this void wouldn't we in essence have to be on the edge of it?
 
At last we have found the great Romulan Empire!! To bad they are already cloaked
 
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