For more than four thousand years, the Great Pyramid of Giza has stood as the most studied building on Earth. Explorers have tunnelled into it, scholars have mapped every known passage, and tourists file through its narrow corridors by the thousand. We thought we knew it. Then, in 2017, a team of physicists pointed particles from outer space at the world’s most famous monument — and discovered an enormous empty space that no human had entered, or even known about, since the age of the pharaohs. It is at least 30 metres long. It sits in the heart of the pyramid. And to this day, no one can say what it is.
A Monument That Still Keeps Secrets
The Great Pyramid was built around 2560 BCE for the pharaoh Khufu, during Egypt’s Fourth Dynasty. For nearly four millennia it was the tallest structure ever made by human hands, rising about 146 metres from a base of some 2.3 million stone blocks. It is the last of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World still standing, and arguably the most scrutinised object in the history of archaeology.
That is exactly what makes the discovery so astonishing. By the 21st century, experts assumed the pyramid had given up its architectural secrets. Its three known interior spaces — the King’s Chamber, the Queen’s Chamber, and the soaring corbelled passage called the Grand Gallery — had been documented for generations. To find a brand-new structure inside it was, in the words of the researchers, the first major internal discovery since the 19th century. The pyramid, it turned out, was still hiding something big.
Catching Ghosts from Outer Space
The breakthrough did not come from a shovel. It came from muons — subatomic particles born when cosmic rays from deep space slam into the upper atmosphere. Muons rain down on the entire planet constantly, passing harmlessly through our bodies and through solid rock. But they are absorbed and scattered more by dense material than by empty air. That single fact makes them a kind of natural X-ray for objects far too massive to scan any other way.
The international ScanPyramids project, launched in 2015, placed muon detectors inside and around the Great Pyramid and waited as the particles streamed through millions of tonnes of limestone. Where the muons passed through solid stone, fewer reached the detectors. Where they passed through a hollow space, more got through. By counting muons from different angles over months, the team could effectively “see” emptiness buried deep inside the rock — without moving a single block.
The Big Void
What the detectors revealed, announced in the journal Nature on 2 November 2017, was a cavity the team called the “ScanPyramids Big Void.” It has a minimum length of about 30 metres and a cross-section strikingly similar to the Grand Gallery directly beneath it. It sits roughly 21 metres above the level of the King’s Chamber, threaded into the very core of the monument.
Crucially, this was not a single fluke reading. The void was first detected with nuclear emulsion films placed in the Queen’s Chamber, then independently confirmed with a different technology — scintillator detectors — in the same chamber, and finally re-confirmed by gas detectors positioned outside the pyramid entirely. Three separate teams, using three separate methods, all saw the same emptiness in the same place. The Big Void is real. The only question is what it was for.
So What Is It?
Here the certainty ends and the mystery begins. The researchers were deliberately careful with their language: they called it a “void,” not a “chamber,” because calling it a room would imply they knew its purpose — and they did not. Decades of theory now hang on that empty space.
Some Egyptologists argue for a sober, structural explanation. The void may be a construction feature — a gap deliberately left by Khufu’s builders to relieve the immense downward pressure on the Grand Gallery, much as the known “relieving chambers” above the King’s Chamber redistribute the crushing weight of stone above it. By this reading, the void is a feat of engineering, not a hidden treasure room.
Others wonder whether it could be something more: a sealed chamber, an unknown passage, or a space connected to the pyramid’s still-debated method of construction. Because no one has entered it, every possibility remains open. What is not on the table — despite what sensational headlines sometimes suggest — is anything supernatural. The genuine wonder here is human: an empty space engineered into a mountain of stone with such precision that it has survived, hidden, for 4,500 years.
A Second Secret: The North Face Corridor
As if one hidden space were not enough, ScanPyramids found another. Above the pyramid’s original entrance on the north face, behind a distinctive chevron-shaped arrangement of giant stones, the muons hinted at a second cavity. In 2023, researchers confirmed it: a corridor roughly nine metres long, unseen since antiquity.
This time they could do more than detect it. By feeding a tiny endoscopic camera through a tiny existing gap between the stones, the team captured the first images of the corridor’s interior — bare, sloping walls vanishing into the dark. The find was later reinforced using a fusion of three non-destructive techniques: ground-penetrating radar, ultrasonic testing, and electrical resistivity. The corridor’s purpose is also unconfirmed, though many suspect it, too, helps redistribute the building’s colossal weight — possibly around the entrance, or around yet another undiscovered feature deeper inside.
Why Not Just Drill In?
It is the obvious question: if we know the void is there, why not break through and look? The answer is restraint. The Great Pyramid is a singular piece of human heritage, and modern researchers are determined not to repeat the destructive tunnelling of earlier centuries. Every recent discovery here has been made without removing a single stone, relying instead on particles, sound, radar, and patience.
Plans have been floated to send a tiny robot or a specially designed probe through a narrow drilled channel to glimpse inside the Big Void without damaging the structure. Until that happens, the space stays exactly as Khufu’s builders left it — sealed, silent, and waiting. In an age when we can photograph the surface of distant planets, one of the largest hidden spaces inside humanity’s most famous building remains, quite literally, unexplored.
A Mystery Sealed in Stone
The Big Void is one of archaeology’s strangest situations: a discovery that is simultaneously certain and unknown. We know it exists. We know roughly how big it is and where it lies. We have confirmed it again and again. And yet we have never seen inside it, and we cannot agree on what it is. It may be nothing more than clever engineering. It may be something no one has imagined. For now, it is a 30-metre question mark buried at the heart of the ancient world.
If we finally send a camera into the Great Pyramid’s hidden void — what do you think we’ll find waiting in the dark?





