: At the very edge of our visibility lies the CMB, a "relic" radiation from the hot, dense early universe.

Throughout history, civilizations have populated the perceived "edges" of the world with legends and monsters.

: In Finnish mythology, the world's edge was known as Lintukoto ("home of the birds"), a warm, paradise-like region where birds traveled for the winter along the Milky Way. 2. Scientific "Legends": Defining the Cosmic Edge

: As early as the 7th century BC, the Babylonians mapped the world as a disc surrounded by "bitter waters," beyond which lay seven mystical lands. These regions were described as the place "where the winged bird ends not his flight".

: Many ancient Greeks believed that traveling far enough toward the world's edge would lead to savage lands inhabited by dog-headed people and tigers with human faces.

: Einstein’s theory of general relativity suggests that if the universe has "positive curvature," it could be finite but without an edge—much like the surface of a sphere where you can travel forever without hitting a boundary. 3. Modern Cultural Interpretations