The real shock is that cosmology says there may be nothing to reach. Not a hidden border. Not a final shell. In standard models built from general relativity, space is represented by the Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric, which allows a cosmos that is finite in volume yet unbounded in the same way a two‑dimensional sphere has no rim despite having limited area.
More unsettling is that this geometry is not a poetic guess but a calculation pinned to cosmic microwave background anisotropies and large‑scale structure surveys, which show space is extremely close to spatially flat or slightly curved, both cases compatible with no outer surface where expansion would stop or a wall would appear. Ask for an edge and the equations respond with continuous spacetime, not a cosmic membrane you could punch through.
Most misleading, then, is the idea that going far enough in one direction should reveal a frontier, because in these solutions the universe either extends without limit or closes back on itself so that a straight path eventually revisits familiar coordinates, like walking on a planet and looping home without ever stepping across a cliff labeled “outside.”