We Are Living in a Broken Universe. And It’s Worse Than You Think
Aug 30, 2025•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
Published10 months ago
Duration33:28
Video IDTsXLaoftLf4
Languageen
CategoryEducation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views150.7K
Likes2.9K
Comments425
Engagement Rate2.21%
Likes per 100 views1.93
Comments per 1K views2.82
Video Tags
#cosmic void#supervoid#universe broken#edge of the universe#end of the universe#universe expansion#hubble tension#dark matter#dark energy#nasa discovery#milky way galaxy#interstellar travel#intergalactic travel#beyond the universe#mysteries of the cosmos#secrets of the universe#astrophysics#astronomy documentary#big bang#multiverse theory
Description
We Are Living in a Broken Universe. And It’s Worse Than You Think
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Have you ever thought about interstellar travel? It sounds romantic, to journey to other worlds, toward the stars… But actual reality might disappoint you.
The current maximum speed of the Voyager 1 probe is 10.5 miles per second (17 km/s)! Even at this speed, the journey to our closest star - Proxima Centauri - would take about 74,600 years!
Now imagine that one day humanity creates spacecraft capable of traveling close to the speed of light, about 186,000 miles per second (300,000 km/s). Sounds impressive - or maybe just impossible? But even that wouldn't be enough. Because even at that speed, if we wanted to leave the Milky Way galaxy it would take around 100,000 years!
And what if we wanted to go further and consider not just interstellar travel, but intergalactic travel as well?
That’s where an even more serious problem emerges. Namely, a gigantic cosmic anomaly that was discovered in 2013.
While conducting research, a group of astrophysicists found that our galaxy is surrounded by a massive cosmic void which, according to the laws of physics, shouldn’t exist.
This isn’t just a region with a lower matter density; it is one of the largest known cosmic voids. Its diameter could reach two-billion-light-years! If it were filled with galaxies, it could fit more than 20,000 Milky Ways, lined up from edge to edge!
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