Is Earth inside a giant void? It could solve one of cosmology's biggest puzzles

Our best observations can't come up with a single answer for how quickly the universe is expanding. Maybe that's because our galaxy is at the center of a giant void.

Illustration of light patterns on black void background.
Illustration of light patterns on black void background.
(Image credit: Pablo Carlos Budassi/wikipedia)

One of the biggest mysteries in cosmology is the rate at which the universe is expanding. This can be predicted using the standard model of cosmology, also known as Lambda-cold dark matter (ΛCDM). This model is based on detailed observations of the light left over from the Big Bang — the so-called cosmic microwave background (CMB).

The universe's expansion makes galaxies move away from each other. The further away they are from us, the more quickly they move. The relationship between a galaxy's speed and distance is governed by "Hubble's constant", which is about 43 miles (70 km) per second per Megaparsec (a unit of length in astronomy). This means that a galaxy gains about 50,000 miles per hour for every million light-years it is away from us.

Indranil Banik
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Astrophysics, University of St Andrews

I work on testing whether galaxies are mainly held together by an invisible substance called dark matter or by a tweak to Newton's law of gravity in situations where it has not been directly tested. Observations strongly favor the latter.