This paper presents a comprehensive examination of the large-scale structure of the Universe, tracing its evolution from primordial quantum fluctuations to the intricate cosmic web observed today. We review the historical development of cosmological thought, from Copernicus’s heliocentric revolution to contemporary large-scale surveys that map structures across billions of light-years. The study synthesizes key observational evidence from the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), extensive galaxy surveys such as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and complementary theoretical frameworks, including inflationary cosmology, dark matter dynamics, and baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs). We critically analyze competing models of structure formation, focusing on the contrasting topologies proposed by Peebles’s “meatball” model, Zel’dovich’s “pancake” scenario, and Gott’s “sponge” topology, and assess their consistency with modern observational data. The paper further investigates large-scale anomalies that appear to challenge the Copernican Principle, including the Great Attractor, the Shapley Supercluster, the Dipole Repeller, and the controversial “Axis of Evil” associated with low-multipole alignments in the CMB. Through this synthesis, we demonstrate how the Universe’s large-scale architecture emerges from the interplay between gravitational collapse and cosmic expansion, mediated primarily by dark matter, which constitutes approximately 85% of the total matter density.
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