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The view from outside

July 30, 2020

Stuck inside, mulling things over, trying to see the Big Picture? Me too. You’ve probably been wondering lately, “I wonder what the universe looks like from outside the universe.” I know I have. Well, here you go, satisfy that itch.
[Chuck Almdale]

The eBOSS 3D map of the Universe – Time: 4:40

This film comes with an narration about what you’re looking at and how and why it came about. Watch this one first.

The film below has no narration and the 3-D rotation is different. Time: 0:57

Cosmos magazine gives a good explanation which you ought to read.

The ultimate map of the Universe
Two decades of work fills an 11-billion-year gap.

The beginning of the article:

Astrophysicists have created the largest and most complete 3D map of the Universe.

It includes measurements of more than two million galaxies and quasars covering 11 billion years of cosmic time and involved 20 years of watching the skies and subsequent analysis by an international collaboration of more than a hundred researchers.

It is based on the latest observations of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), titled the extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS). The results and data have been released in more than 20 scientific papers running to 500+ pages.

Prior to eBOSS, scientists only knew where objects such as galaxies and quasars were as viewed from Earth. The new survey provides the distance to each object, allowing them to build a 3D model.

And that adds significantly to our understanding of the expansion of the Universe.

“We know both the ancient history of the Universe and its recent expansion history fairly well, but there’s a troublesome gap in the middle 11 billion years,” says Kyle Dawson, from the University of Utah, US.

“For five years, we have worked to fill in that gap, and we are using that information to provide some of the most substantial advances in cosmology in the last decade.”

The map has been published as a still image and as a 3D animation (below). A close look at the image reveals the filaments and voids that define the structure in the Universe, the researchers say, starting from when it was only about 300,000 years old.

From this, they can measure patterns in the distribution of galaxies, which give several key parameters of the Universe to better than 1% accuracy. The signals of these patterns are shown in the insets in the image.

The map shows that about six billion years ago the expansion of the Universe began to accelerate and has continued to get faster ever since.

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