New documentary 'Search for the Edge of Space' is free on Magellan TV until Dec. 16

A documentary about the universe's nature backdrop is available for free.

"Search for the Edge of Space" will be free until Thursday, according to a press release. The Hubble Space Telescope and the Vera C. Rubin Observatory are two of the observatory that are trying to learn more about the universe.

"In recent times, giant new telescopes have allowed us to cast our gaze into the deepest reaches of the known universe," narrator Matt Baker says in the documentary's introduction.

The stars and galaxies that stretch out to the limits of our vision may represent a small fraction of all there is. New theories describe a universe that extends far beyond the limits of our vision.

There are some good videos for you. It was created with a sketch.

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The evolution of our universe is depicted in a NASA illustration. The WMAP Science Team is a part of NASA.

Thomas Lucas, co- founder of MagellanTV, has directed, executive produced and/or written a number of space-themed films.

Today's debates about how fast the universe is expanding, and the nature of dark matter and dark energy, are just the latest in a long history of discussion about how the universe behaves.

The ancient Greeks were the first to separate the study of natural sciences from the nature of the gods. The stars are made of an unchanging element known as quintessence that is very different from our own planet, and that's what Aristotle said. The stars and planets share elements.

Some of the Islamic scholars who translated his work in the Middle Ages did not agree with many of the views of Aristotle. Greek mathematician Pythagoras and his followers were against the belief of a finite universe, but they were against the idea of infinite numbers.

Scientists recently proved that the mathematics of pi does not repeat numbers. The news didn't go down well, if the tales of the time were to be believed.

One member of the Pythagorean cult, Hippasus, was drowned at sea for divulging their existence after the discovery of the so-called 'irrational numbers' like pi.

The invention of new mathematics and the addition of a new observing tool began to change things in the 16th century. The documentary shows how human thinking about the universe evolved.
Tycho Brahe, Galileo Galilei, and Nicolaus Copernicus are some of the key names cited. Albert Einstein's work on relativity and the calculations of the mathematics of the universe are underlaying our understanding of the universe's behavior.

There is a microwave background. The image is from the NASA/WMAP Science Team.

The documentary says there are many studies happening to figure out the future of the universe.
The young universe began to expand due to the leftover microwave background from the Big bang. The Large Hadron collider is trying to figure out how the big bang happened.

Telescopes in space and on Earth are studying the expansion of the universe. 3D maps of the galaxies are being made by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The Dark Energy Survey is still publishing data on how dark energy affects the universe's expansion.

Astronomers with Vera Rubin and other observatories are currently engaged in a project mapping black holes from early in the universe, in an attempt to solve one of inflationary theory's "wilder predictions": that we live in a multiverse. You can learn more about the observations by watching the show.

The study shows that in the early days of the universe, more than one universe would have inflated within one of the primordial black holes. If you could go inside, the universe would look like ours.

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