Asymmetry found in spin directions of galaxies
Research also suggests the early universe could have been spinning

Lior Shamir, a K-State computational astronomer and computer scientist,
presented the findings at the 236th American Astronomical Society meeting
in June 2020. The findings are significant because the observations
conflict with some previous assumptions about the large-scale structure of
the universe.

Since the time of Edwin Hubble, astronomers have believed that the universe
is inflating with no particular direction and that the galaxies in it are
distributed with no particular cosmological structure. But Shamir's recent
observations of geometrical patterns of more than 200,000 spiral galaxies
suggest that the universe could have a defined structure and that the early
universe could have been spinning. Patterns in the distribution of these
galaxies suggest that spiral galaxies in different parts of the universe,
separated by both space and time, are related through the directions toward
which they spin, according to the study....
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200601134612.htm

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