<Tr> <Th> Language </Th> <Td> English </Td> </Tr> <P> Cosmic Voyage is a 1996 short documentary film produced in the IMAX format, directed by Bayley Silleck, produced by Jeffrey Marvin, and narrated by Morgan Freeman . The film was presented by the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, and played in IMAX theaters worldwide . The film is available in the DVD format . </P> <P> Cosmic Voyage takes on a similar format as the National Film Board of Canada's Cosmic Zoom, and IBM's classic Powers of Ten educational video . All based on the book Cosmic View by Kees Boeke . The film takes viewers on a journey through forty - two orders of magnitude, beginning at a celebration in Venice, Italy slowly zooming out into the edge of the observable universe . The view descends back to earth, and later zooms in upon a raindrop on a leaf on a hoop used in the celebration mentioned earlier, to the level of subatomic particles (quarks). </P> <P> In addition, the film offers some brief insight on the Big Bang theory, black holes, and the development of our Solar System . It also simulates a journey through Fermilab's Tevatron particle accelerator in Chicago, where an atom collision is depicted . </P>

According to the cosmic voyage film after the big bang the universe