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Universes

Universes are the totality of all physical existence. A universe comprises space, time, matter, energy, and the laws that govern them. In scientific contexts, the term often refers to the observable universe—the portion that can be measured or inferred from light and other signals. The full extent of the universe beyond the observable region, and what form it might take, remain open questions.

The universe is estimated to be about 13.8 billion years old. The observable universe has a radius

Beyond the observable realm, some theories propose a multiverse—a collection of universes with different properties. A

These ideas are speculative and debated. They are difficult to test directly, and some proposed signatures

In science, "universe" usually refers to the sum of what can be observed and inferred within physics,

of
about
46
billion
light-years,
roughly
93
billion
light-years
in
diameter.
The
cosmos
is
expanding,
a
phenomenon
inferred
from
redshifts
of
distant
galaxies
and
described
by
the
Big
Bang
model.
The
expansion
appears
to
be
accelerating,
driven
by
dark
energy.
The
large-scale
structure
includes
galaxies,
clusters,
filaments,
and
voids,
shaped
by
gravity
and
the
initial
fluctuations
from
the
early
universe.
common
framework
classifies
multiverses
into
levels.
Level
I
posits
different
initial
conditions
in
regions
beyond
our
horizon
but
identical
physical
laws.
Level
II
posits
causally
disconnected
regions
formed
by
eternal
inflation
with
potentially
different
constants.
Level
III
corresponds
to
the
many-worlds
interpretation
of
quantum
mechanics,
yielding
branching
histories.
Level
IV
encompasses
the
idea
that
all
mathematical
structures
correspond
to
real
universes.
are
controversial.
Nevertheless,
multiverse
concepts
arise
in
cosmology,
quantum
theory,
and
the
study
of
fundamental
constants,
contributing
to
discussions
about
what
constitutes
a
universe
and
how
its
properties
arise.
while
"multiverse"
refers
to
speculative
extensions
beyond
our
own
cosmos.
The
term
also
appears
in
culture
and
philosophy,
where
it
is
used
more
loosely.