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Scale of the Universe - Online Zoom from Planck to Galaxy

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Human
~1.7 × 10⁰ m
Average human height
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10⁻³⁵ m Planck 10⁻¹⁵ 10⁰ 10¹⁰ 10²⁷ m

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Scale of the Universe?
The Scale of the Universe is an interactive visualization that lets you explore the vast range of sizes in our cosmos — from the smallest known length (Planck length, ~1.6×10⁻³⁵ meters) to the largest structures (the observable universe, ~8.8×10²⁶ meters). It spans over 60 orders of magnitude, helping us understand where humans fit in the grand cosmic scale.
What is the Planck length and why is it important?
The Planck length (~1.6×10⁻³⁵ m) is the smallest meaningful unit of length in physics. At this scale, our current understanding of space-time breaks down, and quantum gravity effects become dominant. It is derived from fundamental constants: the speed of light, Planck's constant, and the gravitational constant. Nothing smaller can be measured or observed with known physics.
How big is the observable universe?
The observable universe has a diameter of approximately 8.8×10²⁶ meters (about 93 billion light-years). This is the region of the universe visible from Earth, limited by the finite speed of light and the age of the universe (~13.8 billion years). Beyond this horizon, light hasn't had time to reach us yet.
Where do humans fit on the cosmic scale?
Humans (~1.7 meters, or 10⁰ m) sit almost exactly in the middle of the logarithmic scale between the Planck length (10⁻³⁵ m) and the observable universe (10²⁷ m). We are about 35 orders of magnitude larger than the Planck length and 27 orders of magnitude smaller than the observable universe — a humbling perspective on our place in the cosmos.
What is the difference between the Milky Way and the observable universe?
The Milky Way galaxy is about 1×10²¹ meters (105,000 light-years) in diameter and contains 100–400 billion stars. The observable universe is about 8.8×10²⁶ meters across — roughly 880,000 times wider than our galaxy — and contains an estimated 2 trillion galaxies. The Milky Way is just one tiny island in this vast cosmic ocean.
How many orders of magnitude does this tool cover?
This tool covers approximately 62 orders of magnitude (from 10⁻³⁵ to 10²⁷ meters). Each step of 1 on the exponent scale represents a 10× change in size. To put that in perspective, going from 10⁰ (human) to 10²⁷ (universe) means multiplying by 10 twenty-seven times — that's a 1 followed by 27 zeros!
What are some surprising size comparisons in the universe?
Some mind-bending comparisons: A single atom is as small compared to an apple as an apple is compared to the Earth. If the Sun were the size of a basketball, Earth would be a tiny bead 2.5mm wide orbiting 26 meters away. And if our entire solar system were shrunk to the size of a coin, the Milky Way would still span the width of the United States.
Can we see things at the Planck scale or the scale of the universe?
No. The Planck scale is far beyond the reach of any current or foreseeable technology — it would require a particle accelerator the size of the solar system. At the other extreme, we can only observe the observable universe; what lies beyond is forever hidden due to the finite speed of light and cosmic expansion. We are fundamentally limited at both ends of the scale.