What’s Directly Above The Milky Way?

What’s Directly Above The Milky Way?

1 Video View·Jun 24, 2026  #universe #perfect #galaxy

#universe, #perfect universe, #galaxy #Mysteries

#insanecuriosity #milkyway #ourgalaxy
The Milky Way is about 100,000 light-years wide.
But it's only about 1,000 light-years thick.
In cosmic terms, our entire galaxy is flatter than a sheet of paper.
So what happens if you stop looking along the disk and aim straight up?
What's actually above the Milky Way?
The answer leads us through globular clusters, the Great Attractor, one of the emptiest regions ever discovered in the universe, and an invisible structure that may be holding our entire galaxy together.
The farther we look away from the disk, the stranger the universe becomes.