that portion of the universe that we can see in principle, given the finite age of the universe
the galaxy
The Universe does not have a centre.
According to the law of conservation of mass, the energy in the universe does not gets created or destroyed. It just transforms from one form to another. Hence the total energy in the universe is uniform.
Universe
Cosmogonies
A parallel universe would be another region of our space-time with its own matter-energy configuration and its own physical laws and constants. In the hypothetical multiverse there could be an infinite number of them existing alongside our universe. This means there could be infinite copies of each one of us living out our lives in infinitely different ways!
The Universe does not have a centre.
There is another universe
According to the law of conservation of mass, the energy in the universe does not gets created or destroyed. It just transforms from one form to another. Hence the total energy in the universe is uniform.
Another name for the entire physical universe is cosmos. It is considered the universe as a unified whole in itself.
Yes.They attract everything and then the thing may another universe
Entropy
Every thing
Everything that exists.
The term 'super-universe' is basically a synonym for the multiverse, a hypothetically larger cosmos than our observable universe.
In science, 'universe' denotes the physical continuum in which we live consisting of matter and energy arranged in four dimensions of space and time. It can also denote another such continuum hypothetically separate from our universe with its own dimensions of space and time and its own arrangement of matter and energy.
7 universes spinning counter clock wise. Another viewpoint. The only time that I have seen this term used is as another way of saying the "Multiverse". The Multiverse is a large number of "parallel" Universes. There are several different theories that propose the Multiverse, of which our Universe would be just a small part.
The usage of universum to mean "the universe" is at least as old as Cicero, the Roman orator.