
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE UNIVERSE
The wonders of this Universe never stop. As the humanity progresses, more studies are being made and new discoveries are surfacing. Knowledge and possibilities are endless. As the universe expands, so does the humanity's curiosity about the phenomena they are in.
ABOUT ME
I am Aaliyah Helene Grace V. Capio, currently a Grade 12 STEM student in STI College Caloocan. This website is created for Educational Purposes only. The credits to the images used are given to all its rightful owners.
This website was made with my own curiosity to the heavenly bodies, the outer space, and the universe as a whole.

OVERVIEW
PAST
The best-supported theory of our universe's origin centers on an event known as the big bang. This theory was born of the observation that other galaxies are moving away from our own at great speed in all directions, as if they had all been propelled by an ancient explosive force.
PRESENT
The present-day universe has provided ample opportunity for the development of life as we know it—there are some 100 billion billion stars similar to the sun in the part of the universe we can observe. The big bang cosmology implies, however, that life is possible only for a bounded span of time: the universe was too hot in the distant past, and it has limited resources for the future. Most galaxies are still producing new stars, but many others have already exhausted their supply of gas. Thirty billion years from now, galaxies will be much darker and filled with dead or dying stars, so there will be far fewer planets capable of supporting life as it now exists.
FUTURE
In order to make a reliable prediction about the future of the Universe, cosmologists need to know its average density. To do this, they need to know what it’s made of. Until about thirty years ago, astronomers thought that the Universe was composed almost entirely of the ‘ordinary’ matter that makes up stars, galaxies and us. However, in recent years the evidence suggests there is something else in the Universe that we can’t see, perhaps some new kind of matter. Today, cosmologists believe that the Universe contains radiation, baryonic (ordinary) matter, dark matter and dark energy.
GALLERY









CONTACT DETAILS
Quezon City, Metro Manila
National Capital Region, Philippines (+63)
capio.187302@caloocan.sti.edu.ph
Tel: 123-456-7890
No. +639123456
Fax: 123-456-7890