Geography, asked by akshra2801, 1 year ago

what can you see in the remote universe?​

Answers

Answered by fatamtany
0

We can see thousands of galaxies billions of light-years away in the universe.

Please let me know if this is not an answer for your question.

Answered by pickledpotatoes420
0

Until about thirty years ago, astronomers thought that the universe was composed almost entirely of this "baryonic matter", ordinary atoms. However, in the past few decades, there has been ever more evidence accumulating that suggests there is something in the universe that we can not see, perhaps some new form of matter. The stuff we have known from a few hundred years by now, ordinary matter ( solids, liquids, gases ) and every such things you can find on Earth ,and probably a few unknown elements all of these are made of atoms. Atoms in the entire universe only make up 4.6% of it. And a 24% is unreactive stuff called dark matter and an astonishing 71.4% is all dark and energy.Dark energy is the name given to the force that is believed to be making the universe larger. It counter acts gravity

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