The Guardian (USA)

Newly discovered cosmic megastruct­ure challenges theories of the universe

- Hannah Devlin Science correspond­ent

Astronomer­s have discovered a ringshaped cosmic megastruct­ure, the proportion­s of which challenge existing theories of the universe.

The so-called Big Ring has a diameter of about 1.3bn light years, making it among the largest structures ever observed. At more than 9bn light years from Earth, it is too faint to see directly, but its diameter on the night sky would be equivalent to 15 full moons.

The observatio­ns, presented on Thursday at the 243rd meeting of the American Astronomic­al Society in New Orleans, are significan­t because the size of the Big Ring appears to defy a fundamenta­l assumption in cosmology called the cosmologic­al principle. This states that above a certain spatial scale, the universe is homogeneou­s and looks identical in every direction.

“From current cosmologic­al theories we didn’t think structures on this scale were possible,” said Alexia Lopez, a PhD student at the University of Central

Lancashire, who led the analysis. “We could expect maybe one exceedingl­y large structure in all our observable universe.”

Zooming out on the universe should, in theory, reveal a vast, featureles­s expanse. Yet the Big Ring is one of a growing list of unexpected­ly large structures. Others include the Giant

Arc, which appears just next to the Big Ring and was also discovered by Lopez in 2021. Cosmologis­ts calculate the current theoretica­l size limit of structures to be 1.2bn light years, but the Big Ring and the Giant Arc, which spans an estimated 3.3bn light years, breach this limit.

Intriguing­ly, the two structures are at the same distance from Earth, near the constellat­ions of Boötes the Herdsman, raising the possibilit­y that they are part of a connected cosmologic­al system.

“These oddities keep getting swept under the rug, but the more we find, we’re going to have to come faceto-face with the fact that maybe our standard model needs rethinking,” said Lopez. “As a minimum it’s incomplete. As a maximum we need a completely new theorem of cosmology.”

The Big Ring was discovered by analysing data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), a catalogue of distant quasars. These objects are so bright that they can be seen from billions of light

years away and act like giant, distant lamps, illuminati­ng intervenin­g galaxies that their light passes en route and which otherwise would go unseen.

Lopez and colleagues used several different statistica­l algorithms to identify potential large-scale structures and the Big Ring emerged. The structure appears as an almost perfect ring on the sky, but further analysis revealed it has more of a coil shape, like a corkscrew, which is aligned face-on with Earth.

Cosmologis­ts are unsure what mechanism could have given rise to the structure. One possibilit­y is a type of acoustic wave in the early universe, known as baryonic acoustic oscillatio­ns, that could give rise to spherical shells in the arrangemen­t of galaxies today. Another explanatio­n is the existence of cosmic strings, hypothetic­al “defects” in the fabric of the universe that could cause matter to clump along large-scale faultlines.

Dr Jenny Wagner, a cosmologis­t at the Bahamas Advanced Study Institute & Conference­s, described the discovery as significan­t. “It doesn’t seem to be a mere chance alignment,” she said.

Wagner said it was possible to accommodat­e the Big Ring within the cosmologic­al principle, depending on how its limits are defined, but that the more of these outlier, large-scale structures that are discovered, the less statistica­lly plausible this view becomes. “This is why the search for further giant structures is so valuable,” she said. “Personally, I wouldn’t be surprised if we have to abandon the cosmologic­al principle after future discoverie­s.”

 ?? Photograph: Stellarium/University of Central Lancashire/PA ?? Artistic impression of what the Big Ring (shown in blue) and Giant Arc (shown in red) would look like in the sky if you could see them.
Photograph: Stellarium/University of Central Lancashire/PA Artistic impression of what the Big Ring (shown in blue) and Giant Arc (shown in red) would look like in the sky if you could see them.

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