Paul Talks Science

When the Cosmic Web Spins


Listen Later

What if the largest structures in the Universe aren’t just expanding — but spinning?

In this episode, host Paul Adepoju explores one of the most intriguing recent developments in cosmology: evidence that a vast cosmic filament stretching tens of millions of light-years may be rotating. The conversation builds on Paul’s feature for Physics Magazine, originally developed as the winning pitch of the Quantum Pitch Competition — launched by Physics Magazine in partnership with Physics World to mark the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology. His article described how astronomers detected large-scale galactic motion using radiation produced by tiny quantum “spin flips” in hydrogen atoms. Read it here.

Drawing on that reporting and an in-depth interview with astrophysicist Dr. Madalina Tudorache, this episode examines how galaxies align along cosmic filaments, how neutral-hydrogen observations reveal coordinated motion, and why angular momentum at these scales is reshaping questions about galaxy formation and large-scale structure.

Along the way, we connect quantum-scale measurements — the 21-centimeter hydrogen transition — to observations of the cosmic web, discuss the role of South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope in enabling the discovery, and reflect on how global collaboration and African radio-astronomy infrastructure are influencing frontier astrophysics.

This episode unpacks the discovery, the physics behind it, and the broader story of how we come to understand motion across the Universe.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Paul Talks ScienceBy Paul ADEPOJU, PhD