The Emptiest Place In The Universe - Boötes Void! What Really Lies In The Darkest Region Of Space?
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- Опубліковано 14 лис 2024
- Ever heard of the Boötes Void? It's one of the most mysterious and massive empty regions in our universe, located about 700 million light-years away. Known as 'The Great Nothing,' this vast cosmic void is an area of space nearly devoid of galaxies, stretching over 330 million light-years across. With far fewer galaxies than expected, scientists are still puzzled by its sheer emptiness. Could it be the result of dark energy, or something even stranger? Dive into this video as we explore the fascinating mysteries behind the Boötes Void and what it tells us about the structure of our universe. 🌌✨
#BoötesVoid #SpaceMystery #Astronomy
It’s scary to imagine that there could be a star just in the middle of that with life,never to see the universe in its golden state.
i dont think you can have a planet without a host star, so 100% there are no planets
@@ryanc12.24 uh, what? You might want to reread the original comment.
the reason there are no galactic empires of intelligent aliens in the universe is that every so often a giant kid fishes them out. And it then takes a few hundred billion years for him to tip the stars back
Why is it that every time somebody makes a video of the Bootes Void, they always seem to use an image of the dust cloud nebula Barnard 68?
The Thumbnail has been changed now. It was initially chosen as Barnard 68 because its image easily portrays the idea of a cosmic void.
There were so many grammatical errors in this video that it was hard to take seriously, was this written and voiced by AI???
The darkest hole in the galaxy is … bootes 😅
Uranus
Uranus (2)
All coming from nothing! Nothing come from?😂😂
Atoms
@@Ramdomwarthunderuser atoms are still something, dummy.
Nobody postulated that the Big bang was caused by nothing. That's your naive interpretation. 😂🤡
cloaked alien civ.
that´s barnard 68 a dust cloud. reported for misinformation
The Thumbnail has been changed now. It was initially chosen as Barnard 68 because its image easily portrays the idea of a cosmic void.