James Webb Saw At the Edge of The Universe

James Webb Saw At the Edge of The Universe Something is wrong at the edge of the universe. NASA has been staring at it for thirty years, and the longer they look, the worse it gets. The instruments we built, the telescopes we launched, and the satellites parked a million miles from Earth keep coming back with the same uncomfortable answer. The universe we mapped, the universe in the textbooks, the universe scientists have spent a century building with equations and supercomputers, doesn't quite match the universe NASA is actually looking at. In this video, we travel out to the back wall of the visible universe and look at what's gone wrong with it. The cold spot found by WMAP in 2004. The Eridanus Supervoid, a hole in space that may not be allowed to exist. The Boötes Void, a region of almost nothing 700 million light-years across. The Great Attractor and the Shapley Supercluster, pulling our entire galaxy toward them at 1.4 million miles per hour. The dark flow result from 2008 that suggests something beyond the observable universe is reaching back through the wall. The "axis of evil" pattern in the microwave background that lines up with our own solar system. The impossible early galaxies the James Webb Space Telescope keeps finding. The Hubble tension that refuses to go away. None of these problems on its own would be fatal. Together, they may be the same problem. And the standard model of cosmology, the best framework we have for everything, is starting to fray at the edges. The next decade will either confirm these anomalies and rewrite the textbooks, or quietly explain them away. Either outcome changes everything. Sources and missions referenced: NASA WMAP, ESA Planck, NASA James Webb Space Telescope, NASA Hubble Space Telescope, NASA Roman Space Telescope (upcoming), ESA Euclid mission, Vera C. Rubin Observatory. If you enjoyed this video, hit subscribe for more deep dives into the strangest places in the universe. #Space #NASA #Universe #Cosmology #Astronomy