Science Astronomers spot ‘cosmic web’ that sticks the universe together


The cosmic web responsible for “gluing” the far-flung galaxies of the universe together has been directly observed for the first time ever.
Scientists using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope were able to spot an ancient cluster of galaxies 12 billion light-years away that are linked together by a network of gas filaments.

The cosmic web theory is central to current explanations of how the universe formed after the Big Bang.
However, until this observation, there had only been indirect evidence to suggest it existed.
Michele Fumagalli, an astrophysicist at Durham University and co-author of the work, said: “It is very exciting to clearly see for the first time multiple and extended filaments in the early universe.”
“We finally have a way to map these structures directly and to understand in detail their role in regulating the formation of supermassive black holes and galaxies.”


The research team was able to directly detect the web by using intensive equipment designed to pick up the faintest of structures.
Galaxy clusters are known for being the most tightly gravitationally bound structures in the universe.
They can contain hundreds of thousands of galaxies.
It has been predicted that 60% of the hydrogen created during the Big Bang can be seen as long filaments strung out across space in the cosmic web.
By mapping out some of the light emitted by hydrogen within a galaxy cluster called SSA22, the team were able to identify individual filaments of gas that make up a web-like structure between galaxies.
Erika Hamden, an astrophysicist at the University of Arizona said: “These observations of the faintest, largest structures in the universe are a key to understanding how our universe evolved through time, how galaxies grow and mature and how the changing environments around galaxies created what we see around us.”

It is thought that the cosmic web is the scaffolding of the cosmos and provides the framework for galaxies to form and evolve.
The latest observations support this theory by revealing supermassive black holes, starbursting galaxies and lots of active stars all at the intersections between the filaments.
First author of the research Hideki Umehata said: “This suggests very strongly that gas falling along the filaments under the force of gravity triggers the formation of starbursting galaxies and supermassive black holes, giving the universe the structure that we see today.”
The cosmic web has been observed before but only as short blobs of gas beyond galaxies.
Umehata noted: “Now we have been able to clearly show that these filaments are extremely long, going even beyond the edge of the field that we viewed.
“This adds credence to the idea that these filaments are actually powering the intense activity that we see within the galaxies inside the filaments.”
The findings have been published in the journal Science.
 
has black science man given his two-cents yet?
Doesn't look like it. I went to his Twitter to check and I was greeted with this:

tyson.png

(https://archive.li/ZWWsh)

...followed by hundreds of "Ackshully, that's a galaxy, not a universe" replies. So business as usual.
 
The title of the article, as is unfortunately common for our times, seems a little clickbaity. There are tenuous strands of hydrogen linking across the universe that bears a mild resemblance to a spiderweb, so the editors have to make it sound like the stuff actually "sticks" galaxies together like literal spider silk because god forbid they not dumb it down.

has black science man given his two-cents yet?
*smug chuckle* well actually, a spiderweb across the universe isn't that impressive, because the average person will never be more than 4 feet away from a spider in their life. *serenely misses the point as usual because he's hung up on assuming his audience are all stupid toddlers*
 
The title of the article, as is unfortunately common for our times, seems a little clickbaity. There are tenuous strands of hydrogen linking across the universe that bears a mild resemblance to a spiderweb, so the editors have to make it sound like the stuff actually "sticks" galaxies together like literal spider silk because god forbid they not dumb it down.
Yeah I came in to ask about this. I thought the cosmic web theory was already considered true due to the particle highways or whatever they're called. Also the model of the current known universe already showed the "web" so I'm not sure what the big deal is.
 
Except that has been proven incorrect - there are things that naturally go faster than light . This has been known since the late 1950's .
That's actually a common misunderstanding. Cherenkov radiation is something that moves faster than light in a medium such as water or air, but nothing can go faster than light in a vacuum.

The speed of light actually changes depending on what substance the light is going through.
 
Holy shit they found the stargate pathways. Surprised Homeworld Security hasnt shut their shit down yet.
 
That's actually a common misunderstanding. Cherenkov radiation is something that moves faster than light in a medium such as water or air, but nothing can go faster than light in a vacuum.

The speed of light actually changes depending on what substance the light is going through.
Yep. It's basically the light equivalent of a sonic boom.
 
This is something I’ve never been clear on. I know wormholes as a concept are scientifically valid, but do they (and black holes) actually act as portals, or is that just sci-fi bullshit that got melded into the public consciousness?
Also, if FTL travel is impossible but wormholes permit near-instant travel across relativistic distances, isn't that still FTL travel?
 
Spoiler alert: God created the universe and He holds it and you together
Ok but how? You act like if that's true that that should satisfy everything and end all questions. Even if you're joking, I've seen people that actually have that attitude.

Also, if FTL travel is impossible but wormholes permit near-instant travel across relativistic distances, isn't that still FTL travel?
It would still allow you to break causality because information is traveling faster than light in some way. No one wants a model that would admit acausal events because then humans lose all ability to process any information about the way the universe works.
 
Ok but how? You act like if that's true that that should satisfy everything and end all questions. Even if you're joking, I've seen people that actually have that attitude.
He has really big hands.
It would still allow you to break causality because information is traveling faster than light in some way.
Not really. The theory is that wormholes are just two pieces of space pushed together so it creates a portal. It's like holding a piece of paper in half, poking a hole in it, and using the hole to get to the other side.
 
Y'all niggas mind if I uhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Cut the web of the universe
 
He has really big hands.

Not really. The theory is that wormholes are just two pieces of space pushed together so it creates a portal. It's like holding a piece of paper in half, poking a hole in it, and using the hole to get to the other side.
Now I have to look up the thought experiments that illustrate how you could use that to break causality and I really don't want to because it'll make my head hurt.


Holy shit I'm not good at this stuff help

But yeah apparently you saying "but I'm not REALLY travelling faster than light" is only true from your POV. Time, space, and velocity aren't really as separate in the real world as concepts as we're used to thinking about them in every day life.
 
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Not really. The theory is that wormholes are just two pieces of space pushed together so it creates a portal. It's like holding a piece of paper in half, poking a hole in it, and using the hole to get to the other side.
How does that get around the "no FTL is possible" rule? You still end up thousands of light years from where you started and it only took a moment to get there. You got there faster than light could get there by taking the "long way."

Not trying to be difficult, btw. I'm genuinely perplexed.
 
How does that get around the "no FTL is possible" rule? You still end up thousands of light years from where you started and it only took a moment to get there. You got there faster than light could get there by taking the "long way."

Not trying to be difficult, btw. I'm genuinely perplexed.
The issue is that from your frame of reference you absolutely did not break the speed of light but from the frame of reference of much of the rest of the universe you did. I don't know what that would do because there is no privileged frame of reference and they'd both be true. But I have a dumb meat brain that evolved for organism scale stuff and works on ideas like velocity is an absolute and objective quality of something and that causes must always precede their effect. A universe with wormholes doesn't care about that stuff.
 
How does that get around the "no FTL is possible" rule? You still end up thousands of light years from where you started and it only took a moment to get there. You got there faster than light could get there by taking the "long way."

Not trying to be difficult, btw. I'm genuinely perplexed.
It's like creating a localized doorway or secret tunnel. The two points in space are connected and thereby local. So while everything around the wormhole is a crazy amount of lightyears away the two points of the wormhole are basically a doorway. Admittedly I've forgotten a lot of the deeper explanations behind it so I don't think I could go into much more detail without making some guesses.
 
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