Extremely rare photos of the whole universe

The universe is so large that we were almost impossible to capture its panorama in the same frame. However, Argentine musician Pablo Carlos Budassi is now able to do this by combining logarithmic maps of the universe from Princeton University (USA) and images produced by the US Aerospace Agency. (NASA) provides.

Mr. Budassi created the image below, showing that the universe was observed in a plate:

Picture 1 of Extremely rare photos of the whole universe
You can observe the universe in just one disk.

Our sun and the solar system are at the center of the image. Then there is the outer ring of the Milky Way, the Constellation (Perseus) of the Milky Way, another round of other nearby galaxies like the Andromeda, the rest of the cosmic network, part The cosmic microwave background radiation remains after the Big Bang and finally the plasma ring produced from the Big Bang.

Logarithmic functions help us make sense of huge numbers and in this case are huge distances. Instead of showing all parts of the universe on a straight line, each circle represents a field of view of many order of magnitude, with the latter larger than the one before it. That's why the whole observable universe can fit inside the circle.

Mr. Budassi came up with the idea after creating hexagonal block toys for his son's birthday."It was the day I came up with the idea of ​​logarithmic observation and the next day I was able to synthesize photoshop photos through images of NASA and some of the structures I created myself , " Mr. Budassi said. reveal.