Viewing the beginning of the universe.

In summary, the furthest away you look in the early universe, the further back in time you can see. However, this limit is because the universe has a finite age and photons travel at a finite speed.
  • #1
simbiote3
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I don't know if this is the right topic to post this, so if it isn't please point me in the right direction.

Ok so I was watching a video on SixtySymbols and they mentioned a picture from the Hubble called Deep Field. And talked about how in that image you are able to see objects from around 10 billion years ago(he just kinda pulled a number from his head but he was just making a point). So my question is since basicaly the farther away you look the farther back in the past you look, does this mean that you can look out far enough to see the beginning of the universe; and if so, wouldn't this assume that the universe is not infinite?
 
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  • #2
You can't see the beginnings of the WHOLE universe. You can only see a chunk of the early universe

estimated to be a large typical sample of how it was about 380,000 years after the start of expansion.

We can't look any deeper back because before that the hot gas was not transparent enough.

===============

There are skymaps of the U that we can see as it was in year 380,000 (or the point in time when it became transparent enough for the light to escape. when the hot glowing gas became cool and thin enough that it "cleared" and visibility improved.

These skymaps are called CMB maps or CBR maps
for "cosmic microwave background" or "cosmic background radiation".

Try googling "CMB wikipedia" or something like that and get a picture of the map. It is a mottled blue and red oval. The blue and red are colorcode for the temperature. It is blotchy because the temperature varies slightly depending on what part of the sky.

CMB mapping is the main way we have to study the very early universe. Back earlier than year 380,000 involves theoretical models and guesswork because we can't see back earlier into the hot fog.

There weren't any galaxies or stars or stuff back then. Just nearly uniform hot glowing gas, with interesting blotchy ripples of temperature and density variation (those ripples were the beginning of structure and pattern that eventually evolved into the present structure and pattern including us.)

If you want to understand more the basic concept you have to wrap mind around is REDSHIFT which is the factor by which space and wavelength has stretched out during the time the light was traveling to us.

The redshift of the CMB radiation is about 1090 or 1100 which means that distances have stretched out by a factor of 1100 while the light was traveling, and also that the wavelengths of the light---the hot gas glow---have stretched out by the same factor of 1100.

So what once was fierce orange light from 3000 degree hot gas is now faint cool radiowaves or microwaves. The stretching both of distances and of lightwaves in transit is the central idea you have to get used to start understanding cosmo.

If you can't find a Wikpedia map of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation, then ask us to help.
 
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  • #3
marcus said:
You can't see the beginnings of the WHOLE universe. You can only see a chunk of the early universe

estimated to be a large typical sample of how it was about 380,000 years after the start of expansion.

We can't look any deeper back because before that the hot gas was not transparent enough.

marcus has mentioned a very important practical limit on how far away the oldest light we can ever see comes from. Just to add to what he said, I thought I would point out that even if the early universe hadn't been a hot, dense, and opaque plasma, we still wouldn't be able to see all the way back to the beginning. There is a very important theoretical limit on far we can see, and it comes from the fact that the universe has a finite age, and light travels at a finite speed. As a result, today, there is a distance beyond which photons have not yet had time to reach us in the age of the universe. In other words, you cannot see any light from objects beyond this distance (even in principle), because the photons emitted by those objects have not yet arrived. This theoretical upper limit on how far we can see is called the horizon distance, and it defines the radius of the observable universe.

If memory serves, the horizon scale is approximately 46 billion light years. You might expect it to be 13.7 billion light years, and that would have been true in a static universe. However, the universe is expanding, and as a result the horizon scale is larger than the light travel time would suggest.
 
  • #4
Good point. Thanks Cepheid!
 
  • #5
I'd just like to point out that while the ionization of the early universe puts an upper limit on how far back in time we can observe, we should note that it is still possible to make direct observations of the universe before this epoch. Specifically, by observing neutrinos you can probe the universe up until it was about 1 second old. Then, theoretically, you should be able to detect gravitational waves from the early universe, which should get you basically to the time when the universe was a Planck time old.
 
  • #6
Thanks for the replies Marcus and Cepheid. Your descriptions helped me understand a lot more.

How is it that we are able to separate the CMB's radiation and the rest of the universe's radiation and determine where/when it came from?
 
  • #7
Nabeshin said:
I'd just like to point out that while the ionization of the early universe puts an upper limit on how far back in time we can observe, we should note that it is still possible to make direct observations of the universe before this epoch. Specifically, by observing neutrinos you can probe the universe up until it was about 1 second old. Then, theoretically, you should be able to detect gravitational waves from the early universe, which should get you basically to the time when the universe was a Planck time old.

Yeah, actually I was wrong above when I said that the horizon issue meant that we could not see all the way to the beginning in principle. In *practice* we can't because we can't see photons emitted before about 380,000 years after the big bang, and present technology prevents us from detecting primordial neutrinos or primordial gravitational waves. But in *principle* IF we could "see" (meaning "detect signals") all the way out to the edge of the observable universe, then we would be seeing signals that were emitted as far back as the beginning of the universe. So, the horizon doesn't limit how far back in time we can look, only how far out in distance. Thanks for making me aware of my mistake.
 
  • #8
simbiote3 said:
Thanks for the replies Marcus and Cepheid. Your descriptions helped me understand a lot more.

How is it that we are able to separate the CMB's radiation and the rest of the universe's radiation and determine where/when it came from?

That's an excellent question. To a certain extent, our telescopes don't distinguish. An experiment like WMAP maps the whole sky at microwave wavelengths, and so any radiation that lies within the microwave "bands" (wavelength ranges) to which our telescopes are sensitive will be detected, regardless of source. We don't have to worry about radiation from sources that is not at microwave wavelengths, such as gamma rays, X-rays, UV, visible light, near infrared, and longer radio wavelengths, since we've designed our telescope to be sensitive only to certain narrow ranges of the EM spectrum corresponding to microwaves. Nevertheless, microwave radiation from other sources is still problematic, particularly for CMB observations. Normally in astrophysics we are interested in some foreground source, and any background emission at the same wavelengths just acts as noise that reduces our sensitivity. With the CMB, however, it's the smooth (and faint) background emission we're interested in, and all other sources are in the foreground and are much stronger! There are a few things that aid in foreground mitigation/removal though:

1. The CMB Isotropy

We see the see CMB over the whole sky i.e. it comes at us from all directions. In contrast most other microwave sources are localized. For instance, the dominant source of foreground emission is thermal emission from dust within our own galaxy. That tends to be confined to a narrow band across the sky corresponding to the Galactic plane. If you don't need to map the whole sky, you can look away from the Galactic plane where foreground emission is lower. If you do need to map the whole sky, you need to get fancy and try to remove the dust emission. That could be aided by...

2. The CMB Spectrum

The spectrum of the CMB corresponds to an almost perfect blackbody radiator with a temperature of about 3 K. In fact it's one of the finest examples of a blackbody in nature. There aren't any other astrophysical sources of emission that are 3 K blackbodies and appear distributed over the whole sky. In fact, the spectrum of thermal dust emission from the Galactic plane will appear quite different, if nothing else because the dust is not as close to being a perfect blackbody emitter. Furthermore, it has a much higher temperature than 3 K (I think that even the coldest and densest dusty molecular clouds we've observed in our Galaxy are ~10 K), so the shape and amplitude of the dust spectrum in the bands in which you're observing is going to be totally different from the CMB spectrum. If you can model the spectra of all the various components that contribute to the emission you're observing, you can then try to separate them from each other. Of course, the much higher dust temperature probably leads to much stronger emission in general, which contributes further to the problem (if you look at the unprocessed WMAP CMB map, you'll see how much brighter the emission in the Galactic plane is than anywhere else). Bottom line: foreground subtraction is a problem that every CMB experiment has to deal with.

EDIT:

3. The CMB Redshift

You also asked how we know when the emission comes from. We can figure out theoretically what the redshift of the CMB photons ought to be because we know what the radiation temperature ought to have been at the time that the process that produced those CMB photons occurred. This process is known as recombination and basically refers to the universe cooling to the point that protons and electrons could combine to form stable hydrogen atoms for the first time. This process would have occurred when the radiation temperature was around 3000 K. Note: the transition from a plasma to neutral gas is essentially what caused the universe to go from opaque to transparent -- for the first time, photons could stream freely through space without having to worry about constantly bumping into charged particles. That's why we see the CMB photons coming at us from all directions. Anyway, the point is that the present measured radiation temperature of the CMB is around 3 K (vs. 3000 K when it was emitted), and since radiation temperature scales linearly with redshift, we know that the CMB photons have been redshifted by a factor of about 1000. I imagine that if we can measure the redshift of some foreground source of emission and determine it to be much much less than 1000, then we know that that is indeed a foreground source and not CMB. However, I sort of just made that last part up based on common sense, so take it with a grain of salt.
 
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Related to Viewing the beginning of the universe.

1. What is the "beginning of the universe"?

The beginning of the universe refers to the moment when all matter and energy in the universe originated, approximately 13.8 billion years ago in an event known as the Big Bang.

2. How do scientists study the beginning of the universe?

Scientists study the beginning of the universe through various methods such as observing the cosmic microwave background radiation, analyzing the composition of elements in the universe, and using mathematical models and simulations.

3. What evidence supports the Big Bang theory?

There are several pieces of evidence that support the Big Bang theory, including the expansion of the universe, the abundance of light elements, and the cosmic microwave background radiation. These observations align with predictions made by the Big Bang theory.

4. Can we see the beginning of the universe?

No, we cannot see the actual beginning of the universe as it occurred over 13 billion years ago. However, we can observe the remnants of the Big Bang through the cosmic microwave background radiation, which provides a snapshot of the universe as it was just 380,000 years after the Big Bang.

5. What is the significance of studying the beginning of the universe?

Studying the beginning of the universe allows us to better understand the origins and evolution of our universe. It also helps us answer fundamental questions about the nature of space, time, and matter, and can potentially lead to advancements in areas such as cosmology and astrophysics.

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