Ever wonder why the night sky is dark even though it is filled with countless stars just about as bright as the sun?
As the universe continues its ever-expansion, the doppler affect causes stars moving away from us to become redder, eventually infrared, and not visible to the human eye. And because our universe had a beginning, about 13.7 billion years ago, and light from the most distant stars has not had time to reach us, they’re aren’t enough stars to “fill up the brightest” in every direction.
But don’t take the word of a mere enthusiast, this video explains it much better.
Last week, NASA released “new, improved portrait of mankind’s deepest-ever view of the universe” by combing 10 years of Hubble Space Telescope imagery taken of a small area of space in the constellation Fornax containing about 5,500 galaxies. Meanwhile, I was stoked just to faintly capture the Andromeda Galaxy earlier this year.
Article by Luis X Barrios, CEO of Arkangeles For far too long, venture capital has…
The World Economic Forum (WEF) deletes a session entitled, "Valuing Nature's Assets," from its Sustainable…
The theme of the 2024 Horasis India Meeting is cooperation, impact investing, and sustainable growth…
World leaders gather on the UN Summit of the Future Global Call to advocate for…
Image via: Freepik When an entire nation devotes its attention to Vice President Kamala Harris…
World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab says that the world is undergoing profound systemic…