
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


"There's some order in this chaotic universe."
Those are the words of Noam Libeskind a postdoctoral researcher at Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam. He was referring to recent breakthrough findings in astrophysics.
Scientists have long thought that the entire universe is interconnected by a "cosmic web" of dark matter and gas structures. What Libeskind and his team found was that these colossal filaments are rotating, which makes them "the largest objects known to have angular momentum."
In Libeskind's words, "they're not just swarming randomly. There's actually an ordered motion to them."
By Colson Center4.9
168168 ratings
"There's some order in this chaotic universe."
Those are the words of Noam Libeskind a postdoctoral researcher at Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam. He was referring to recent breakthrough findings in astrophysics.
Scientists have long thought that the entire universe is interconnected by a "cosmic web" of dark matter and gas structures. What Libeskind and his team found was that these colossal filaments are rotating, which makes them "the largest objects known to have angular momentum."
In Libeskind's words, "they're not just swarming randomly. There's actually an ordered motion to them."

5,227 Listeners

8,655 Listeners

1,263 Listeners

3,093 Listeners

7,150 Listeners

1,253 Listeners

5,375 Listeners

1,091 Listeners

642 Listeners

644 Listeners

396 Listeners

615 Listeners

1,312 Listeners

1,363 Listeners

551 Listeners

272 Listeners