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Minnesotans find plenty of nothing

Published on
九月 7, 2007
Last updated
五月 22, 2015

"Researcher discovers nothing" does not sound

particularly spectacular, but scientists at the University of Minnesota have discovered some ground-breaking nothingness. The research team has found a void in the universe a thousand times bigger than any previously discovered - so big that it would take a billion years for a beam of light to cross it. The void is in the constellation Eridanus to the southwest of Orion, between 6 billion and 10 billion light-years away. "It's really strange that there is such an empty region," said Marco Peloso, assistant professor of physics at the university. "How do you explain this? It was quite a surprise."

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