SURPRISE object sneaks out from behind sun! Headed towards EARTH
Science often gets portrayed as if it has everything figured out, but in reality, the best scientists know they’re always standing at the edge of the unknown. Space especially keeps humbling us.
For example, we only understand a small fraction of the universe: about 5% is ordinary matter (stars, planets, you, me). The rest—dark matter and dark energy—isn’t fully understood, only inferred from effects on galaxies and expansion. Even things we thought we understood, like black holes, keep surprising us with discoveries about their jets, spin, or the way they bend spacetime.
There’s also the problem of distance. Telescopes like James Webb can peer billions of light years away, but that means we’re looking into the past. We still don’t know how the first galaxies formed so quickly after the Big Bang, or if our theories about cosmic inflation even hold.
In truth, the more powerful our instruments become, the stranger the universe looks. Science is learning, but it often wraps that uncertainty in technical language that makes it sound more confident than it is. The real story is: every discovery opens more questions, not fewer.
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@1TheBrutalTruth1 Sept 2025 Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976: Allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research.
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