Astronomers puzzled by massive blank spot in universe
Posted: 24 August 2007 05:45 AM   [ Ignore ]
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WASHINGTON —  Astronomers have stumbled upon a tremendous hole in the universe. That’s got them scratching their heads about what’s just not there. The cosmic blank spot has no stray stars, no galaxies, no sucking black holes, not even mysterious dark matter. It is 1 billion light years across of nothing. That’s an expanse of nearly 6 billion trillion miles of emptiness, a University of Minnesota team announced Thursday.

Astronomers have known for many years that there are patches in the universe where nobody’s home. In fact, one such place is practically a neighbor, a mere 2 million light years away. But what the Minnesota team discovered, using two different types of astronomical observations, is a void that’s far bigger than scientists ever imagined.

“This is 1,000 times the volume of what we sort of expected to see in terms of a typical void,” said Minnesota astronomy professor Lawrence Rudnick, author of the paper that will be published in Astrophysical Journal. “It’s not clear that we have the right word yet ... This is too much of a surprise.”

Rudnick was examining a sky survey from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, which essentially takes radio pictures of a broad expanse of the universe. But one area of the universe had radio pictures indicating there was up to 45 percent less matter in that region, Rudnick said.

The rest of the matter in the radio pictures can be explained as stars and other cosmic structures between here and the void, which is about 5 to 10 billion light years away.

Rudnick then checked observations of cosmic microwave background radiation and found a cold spot. The only explanation, Rudnick said, is it’s empty of matter.

It could also be a statistical freak of nature, but that’s probably less likely than a giant void, said James Condon, an astronomer at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. He wasn’t part of Rudnick’s team but is following up on the research.

“It looks like something to be taken seriously,” said Brent Tully, a University of Hawaii astronomer who wasn’t part of this research but studies the void closer to Earth.

Tully said astronomers may eventually find a few cosmic structures in the void, but it would still be nearly empty.

Holes in the universe probably occur when the gravity from areas with bigger mass pull matter from less dense areas, Tully said. After 13 billion years “they are losing out in the battle to where there are larger concentrations of matter,” he said.

Retired NASA astronomer Steve Maran said of the discovery: “This is incredibly important for something where there is nothing to it.”

 

6 Billion Trillion? Woah.

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Posted: 24 August 2007 05:50 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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God- “Hey, it’s a work in progress. It took me a week to get the Earth done. One planet- you think the rest of the whole f***in’ universe is easy? I give you people life, I make the whole universe in my spare time and you cheeky little shits have the sheer audacity to BITCH about the bit I’ve left to the end?”

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Posted: 24 August 2007 05:59 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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Wow O.o That’s a lot of nothing.

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Posted: 24 August 2007 08:22 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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After all these years with black holes finally a blank spot.

In ST Voyager they crossed something like that.
So it was predictable.

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Posted: 24 August 2007 08:33 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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Holes in the universe probably occur when the gravity from areas with bigger mass pull matter from less dense areas, Tully said. After 13 billion years “they are losing out in the battle to where there are larger concentrations of matter,” he said.

Retired NASA astronomer Steve Maran said of the discovery: “This is incredibly important for something where there is nothing to it.”

‘BlankMatter’ ???  a little like dropping oil onto water?  I guess the explanation above is logical though.  I suspect that most of the universe is just a very large blank void….well for the moment.  When humans learn how to safely travel throughout it though, that’ll all change, believe me.

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Posted: 24 August 2007 08:57 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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hulitoons - 24 August 2007 08:33 AM

Holes in the universe probably occur when the gravity from areas with bigger mass pull matter from less dense areas, Tully said. After 13 billion years “they are losing out in the battle to where there are larger concentrations of matter,” he said.

Retired NASA astronomer Steve Maran said of the discovery: “This is incredibly important for something where there is nothing to it.”

‘BlankMatter’ ???  a little like dropping oil onto water?  I guess the explanation above is logical though.  I suspect that most of the universe is just a very large blank void….well for the moment.  When humans learn how to safely travel throughout it though, that’ll all change, believe me.

Yes, with the inter-space equivalent of coffee cups, cigarette butts and candy-bar wrappers.

Of course, then they’ll just start an “adopt a blank matter spot” program and you’ll see big neon signs like “This Trillion Square Miles adopted by People For the September 12th Theory” and the like. LOL

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Posted: 24 August 2007 09:03 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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Transfrmr - 24 August 2007 08:57 AM
hulitoons - 24 August 2007 08:33 AM

Holes in the universe probably occur when the gravity from areas with bigger mass pull matter from less dense areas, Tully said. After 13 billion years “they are losing out in the battle to where there are larger concentrations of matter,” he said.

Retired NASA astronomer Steve Maran said of the discovery: “This is incredibly important for something where there is nothing to it.”

‘BlankMatter’ ???  a little like dropping oil onto water?  I guess the explanation above is logical though.  I suspect that most of the universe is just a very large blank void….well for the moment.  When humans learn how to safely travel throughout it though, that’ll all change, believe me.

Yes, with the inter-space equivalent of coffee cups, cigarette butts and candy-bar wrappers.

Of course, then they’ll just start an “adopt a blank matter spot” program and you’ll see big neon signs like “This Trillion Square Miles adopted by People For the September 12th Theory” and the like. LOL

Please no.  I would hate the thought of anything September 12th would adopt.  The place would be littered with signs advertising the start of the next intergalactic war.    Updated every year of course when the deadline passed and they had to get a new date from their emptiness.

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Posted: 24 August 2007 09:12 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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I bet it’s God’s Ranch.  Since God, and all of His attendants, are immaterial this makes perfect sense.  And since you can’t disprove It I win automatically.

I wonder if He calls It the Ponderosa.  That would be so cool.

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Posted: 24 August 2007 11:01 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
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Eeeek
There are patches in the sky

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Posted: 24 August 2007 11:20 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 9 ]
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Sharruma - 24 August 2007 11:01 AM

Eeeek
There are patches in the sky

And if they correspond with patches in the very fabric of the universe. .  . . I wonder if they’re iron-ons.

Edit:  It’s just as well because Fox News nearly always keeps me in stitches.

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