Unveiling the Universe's Expansion: Could a Giant Void Hold the Answer?

Researchers propose that we live in a giant void in space, which could explain the discrepancy in the rate of the universe's expansion known as the Hubble tension. The void, with below-average density, would cause outflows of matter that inflate local measurements. This theory is based on an alternative model called Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND), which suggests that gravity behaves differently in weak gravitational fields. Recent observations of galaxy velocities support this idea, showing a quadruple speed compared to the standard model. These findings challenge the current understanding of cosmology and may require a revision of Einstein's theory of gravity.
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