The Universe is all
of time and space and its contents.The Universe includes
planets, stars, galaxies, the contents of intergalactic space, the smallest
subatomic particles, and all matter and energy. The observable universe is
about 28 billion parsecs (91 billion light-years) in diameter at the present
time. The size of the whole Universe is not known and may be infinite. Observations and the development of physical theories have led to inferences
about the composition and evolution of the Universe.
Throughout recorded
history, cosmologies and cosmogonies, including scientific models, have been
proposed to explain observations of the Universe. The earliest quantitative
geocentric models were developed by ancient Greek philosophers and Indian
philosophers. Over the centuries, more precise astronomical
observations led to Nicolaus Copernicus's heliocentric model of the Solar
System and Johannes Kepler's improvement on that model with elliptical orbits,
which was eventually explained by Isaac Newton's theory of gravity. Further
observational improvements led to the realization that the Solar System is
located in a galaxy composed of billions of stars, the Milky Way. It was
subsequently discovered that our galaxy is just one of many. On the largest
scales, it is assumed that the distribution of galaxies is uniform and the same
in all directions, meaning that the Universe has neither an edge nor a center.
Observations of the distribution of these galaxies and their spectral lines have
led to many of the theories of modern physical cosmology. The discovery in the
early 20th century that galaxies are systematically redshifted suggested that
the Universe is expanding, and the discovery of the cosmic microwave background
radiation suggested that the Universe had a beginning. Finally,
observations in the late 1990s indicated the rate of the expansion of the
Universe is increasing indicating that the majority of energy is most
likely in an unknown form called dark energy. The majority of mass in the
universe also appears to exist in an unknown form, called dark matter.
The Big Bang theory
is the prevailing cosmological model describing the development of the
Universe. Space and time were created in the Big Bang, and these were imbued with
a fixed amount of energy and matter; as space expands, the density of that
matter and energy decreases. After the initial expansion, the Universe cooled
sufficiently to allow the formation first of subatomic particles and later of
simple atoms. Giant clouds of these primordial elements later coalesced through
gravity to form stars. Assuming that the prevailing model is correct, the age
of the Universe is measured to be 13.799±0.021 billion years.
There are many
competing hypotheses about the ultimate fate of the Universe. Physicists and
philosophers remain unsure about what, if anything, preceded the Big Bang. Many
refuse to speculate, doubting that any information from any such prior state
could ever be accessible. There are various multiverse hypotheses, in which
some physicists have suggested that the Universe might be one among many
universes that likewise exist.
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