Scientists ‘staggered’ as colossal cosmic collision alters understanding of early universe
The birth of a galaxy cluster soon after the Big Bang could have given rise to one of the largest structures in the cosmos

Astronomers have detected the early stages of a colossal cosmic collision, observing a pile-up of 14 galaxies 90 per cent of the way across the observable universe in a discovery that upends assumptions about the early history of the cosmos.

It marked the first time scientists observed the birth of a galaxy cluster, with at least 14 galaxies crammed into an area only about four times the size of our average-sized Milky Way galaxy.
A protocluster as massive as the one observed here, designated as SPT2349-56, should not have existed at that time, according to current notions of the early universe. Scientists had figured this could not happen until several billion of years later.
“We were staggered by the implications,” said astrophysicist Scott Chapman of Dalhousie University in Canada. “Yes, conventional wisdom was that clusters take a lot longer to build up and assemble. SPT2349 shows us it happened much more rapidly and explosively than simulations or theory suggested.”
Galaxy clusters can have thousands of galaxies bound together by gravity that can boast total masses a quadrillion larger than our sun, with immense amounts of the enigmatic material called dark matter, gigantic black holes and super-heated gas.