Trivia Cafe
84

What record-breaking cosmic structure, spanning millions of light-years, did scientists claim to have found in December 2025?

Learn More

Rotating structure - current events illustration
Rotating structure — current events

In December 2025, scientists announced the discovery of an enormous, record-breaking rotating structure in the universe, a cosmic filament spanning tens of millions of light-years. This structure, which includes a "razor-thin" string of 14 galaxies, is one of the largest spinning objects ever observed. The larger cosmic filament itself stretches approximately 50 million light-years and contains over 280 galaxies, with a particular thin chain of hydrogen-rich galaxies measuring about 5.5 million light-years long and 117,000 light-years wide.

This groundbreaking discovery challenges existing models of how galaxies form and evolve within the vast cosmic web. Previously, while cosmic filaments were known to be immense thread-like formations of galaxies and dark matter that act as cosmic scaffolding, their large-scale coherent rotation was not fully understood. The finding that the entire structure is rotating, with an estimated velocity of 110 kilometers per second, suggests a more profound influence of these cosmic highways on galaxy rotation than previously thought.

Astronomers from institutions including the University of Oxford, utilizing data from surveys like MIGHTEE and telescopes such as MeerKAT, observed that many of the galaxies within this filament appear to be spinning in the same direction as the filament itself. This synchronized motion across such an immense scale provides valuable insights into the early universe and how structures like galaxies acquire their spin and gas. Further research building on this discovery will continue to test theories about cosmic rotation and deepen our understanding of the universe's large-scale architecture.