Yes, the universe itself will eventually outpace the speed of light.  Just how this will happen is a bit complicated, so let’s begin at the  very beginning: the big bang.
Around 14 billion years ago, all matter in  the universe was thrown in every direction. That first explosion is  still pushing galaxies outward. Scientists know this because of the  Doppler effect, among other reasons. The wavelengths of light from other  galaxies shift as they move away from us, just as the pitch of an  ambulance siren changes as it moves past.
Take Hydra, a cluster of galaxies about three billion light years  away. Astronomers have measured the distance from the Earth to Hydra by  looking at the light coming from the cluster. Through a prism, Hydra’s  hydrogen looks like four strips of red, blue-green, blue-violet and  violet. 
But during the time it takes Hydra’s light to reach us, the  bands of color have shifted down toward the red end—the low-energy  end—of the spectrum. On their journey across the universe, the  wavelengths of light have stretched. The farther the light travels, the  more stretched it gets. 
The farther the bands shift toward the red end,  the farther the light has traveled. The size of the shift is called the  redshift, and it helps scientists figure out the movement of stars in  space. Hydra isn’t the only distant cluster of galaxies that displays a  redshift, though. 
Everything is shifting, because the universe is  expanding. It’s just easier to see Hydra’s redshift because the farther a  galaxy is from our own, the faster it is moving away.
 There is no limit to how fast the universe can expand, says physicist  Charles Bennett of Johns Hopkins University. Einstein’s theory that  nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum still  holds true, because space itself is stretching, and space is nothing. 
Galaxies aren’t moving through space and away from each other but with  space—like raisins in a rising loaf of bread. Some galaxies are already  so far away from us, and moving away so quickly, that their light will  never reach Earth. “It’s like running a 5K race, but the track expands  while you’re running,” Bennett says. “If it expands faster than you can  run, you’ll never get where you’re going."
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