The universe is unimaginably vast. But not for cosmologists. They feel
decidedly hemmed in. No matter how big they build their telescopes,
they can only see so far before hitting a wall. Approximately 45
billion light years away lies the cosmic horizon, the ultimate barrier
because light beyond it not has not had time to reach us.  One needs
something of a calculation here as we think the universe is only 13 -
16 billion years old - and there is one that works.  So, stuck inside
our patch of universe, wondering what lies beyond and resigned to that
fact we may never know, the best we can hope for, through some
combination of luck and vigilance, is to spot a crack in the structure
of things, a possible window to that hidden place beyond the edge of
the universe. Now Sasha Kashlinsky believes he has stumbled upon such
a window.

Kashlinsky, a senior staff scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, has been studying how rebellious
clusters of galaxies move against the backdrop of expanding space. He
and colleagues have clocked galaxy clusters racing at up to 1000
kilometres per second - far faster than our best understanding of
cosmology allows. Stranger still, every cluster seems to be rushing
toward a small patch of sky between the constellations of Centaurus
and Vela.  This may be a window on what lies beyond the universe and
new explanations of dark flow, with something beyond what we have ever
seen being responsible.  One might tell more, but small minds might be
corrupted ...
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