Is the Universe Not the Same Everywhere? DESI Data Challenges One of Cosmology’s Biggest Assumptions
For decades, scientists have believed that the universe, when viewed on extremely large scales, should look the same in every direction. This idea, known as the cosmological principle, is one of the foundations of modern cosmology. It suggests that although the universe may appear messy and uneven at smaller scales, its overall structure should become smooth and uniform when observed across billions of light-years. However, new observations from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) are raising questions about this long-standing belief. After mapping the positions of 47 million galaxies across nearly 11 billion light-years, researchers suggest that the universe may not be perfectly identical in all directions, even at enormous cosmic scales. The findings, reported by astronomers Francesco Sylos Labini and Marco Galoppo, indicate that large-scale patterns in the distribution of galaxies may contain unexpected directional differences. If confirmed, this discovery could force sc...