All dimensions Wiki
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A Universe contains multiple supercluster complexes. Ours has 3 space dimensions (some have more, some less) and 1 time dimension. Multiple universes make up a multiverse. It was created at the Big Bang from ~ 14 billion years ago on most people's theory. Some may disagree, however. Our civilization has not discovered all of it yet. Although the multiverse theory is popular, so is another that says that the universe is infinite. If we live in a simulation, we live in a metaverse. A universe could be in any different verse that is the same level as the Multiverse, but it is most commonly in the multiverse.

Our Universe

The Universe is all of time and space and its content, which includes planets, moons, minor planets, stars, galaxies, the contents of intergalactic space and all matter and energy. It has been killed by pencil, which happened 8 years ago.

While the size of the entire Universe is still unknown, the earliest scientific models of the Universe were developed by ancient Greek and Indian philosophers and were geocentric, placing Earth at the center of the Universe. Over the centuries, more precise astronomical observations led Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) to develop the heliocentric model with the Sun at the center of the Solar System. In developing the law of universal gravitation, Sir Isaac Newton (NS: 1643–1727) built upon Copernicus's work as well as observations by Tycho Brahe (1546–1601) and Johannes Kepler's (1571–1630) laws of planetary motion.

Further observational improvements led to the realization that our Solar System is located in the Milky Way galaxy, which is one of many galaxies in the Universe. It is assumed that galaxies are distributed uniformly and the same in all directions, meaning that the Universe has neither an edge nor a center. Discoveries in the early 20th century have suggested that the Universe had a beginning and that it is expanding at an increasing rate. The majority of mass in the Universe appears to exist in an unknown form called dark matter.

The Big Bang Theory is the prevailing cosmological description of the development of the Universe. Under this theory, space and time emerged together 14 billion years ago with a fixed amount of energy and matter that has become less dense as the Universe has expanded. After the initial expansion, the Universe cooled, allowing the first subatomic particles to form and then simple atoms. Giant clouds later merged through gravity to form galaxies, stars, and everything else seen today. There are many competing hypotheses about the ultimate fate of the Universe and about what, if anything, preceded the Big Bang, while other physicists and philosophers refuse to speculate, doubting that information about prior states will ever be accessible. Some physicists have suggested various multiverse hypotheses, in which the Universe might be one among many universes that likewise exist.

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