Close Menu
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Security
  • Podcast
  • Contact

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest technology news from TechFinancials News about FinTech, Tech, Business, Telecoms and Connected Life.

What's Hot

EFF MP Forcibly Removed After Challenging DG On Mantashe Son’s SETA Role

2025-05-14

DA Exposes SAPS Body Camera Delay: No Cameras Deployed Yet

2025-05-14

Still No Ruling: Makate vs Vodacom Stalls As Court Keeps SA Waiting

2025-05-14
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • EFF MP Forcibly Removed After Challenging DG On Mantashe Son’s SETA Role
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
TechFinancials
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Security
  • Podcast
  • Contact
TechFinancials
Home»Trending News»The Most Powerful Space Telescope Ever Built Will Look Back In Time To The Dark Ages Of The Universe
Trending News

The Most Powerful Space Telescope Ever Built Will Look Back In Time To The Dark Ages Of The Universe

The ConversationBy The Conversation2021-10-14No Comments6 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Telescope
Telescope
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

Some have called NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope the “telescope that ate astronomy.” It is the most powerful space telescope ever built and a complex piece of mechanical origami that has pushed the limits of human engineering. On Dec. 18, 2021, after years of delays and billions of dollars in cost overruns, the telescope is scheduled to launch into orbit and usher in the next era of astronomy.

I’m an astronomer with a specialty in observational cosmology – I’ve been studying distant galaxies for 30 years. Some of the biggest unanswered questions about the universe relate to its early years just after the Big Bang. When did the first stars and galaxies form? Which came first, and why? I am incredibly excited that astronomers may soon uncover the story of how galaxies started because James Webb was built specifically to answer these very questions.

A graphic showing the progression of the Universe through time.
The Universe went through a period of time known as the Dark Ages before stars or galaxies emitted any light.
Space Telescope Institute

The ‘Dark Ages’ of the universe

Excellent evidence shows that the universe started with an event called the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago, which left it in an ultra-hot, ultra-dense state. The universe immediately began expanding after the Big Bang, cooling as it did so. One second after the Big Bang, the universe was a hundred trillion miles across with an average temperature of an incredible 18 billion F (10 billion C). Around 400,000 years after the Big Bang, the universe was 10 million light years across and the temperature had cooled to 5,500 F (3,000 C). If anyone had been there to see it at this point, the universe would have been glowing dull red like a giant heat lamp.

Throughout this time, space was filled with a smooth soup of high energy particles, radiation, hydrogen and helium. There was no structure. As the expanding universe became bigger and colder, the soup thinned out and everything faded to black. This was the start of what astronomers call the Dark Ages of the universe.

The soup of the Dark Ages was not perfectly uniform and due to gravity, tiny areas of gas began to clump together and become more dense. The smooth universe became lumpy and these small clumps of denser gas were seeds for the eventual formation of stars, galaxies and everything else in the universe.

Although there was nothing to see, the Dark Ages were an important phase in the evolution of the universe.

A diagram showing different wavelengths of light compared to size of normal objects.
Light from the early universe is in the infrared wavelength – meaning longer than red light – when it reaches Earth.
Inductiveload/NASA via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Looking for the first light

The Dark Ages ended when gravity formed the first stars and galaxies that eventually began to emit the first light. Although astronomers don’t know when first light happened, the best guess is that it was several hundred million years after the Big Bang. Astronomers also don’t know whether stars or galaxies formed first.

Current theories based on how gravity forms structure in a universe dominated by dark matter suggest that small objects – like stars and star clusters – likely formed first and then later grew into dwarf galaxies and then larger galaxies like the Milky Way. These first stars in the universe were extreme objects compared to stars of today. They were a million times brighter but they lived very short lives. They burned hot and bright and when they died, they left behind black holes up to a hundred times the Sun’s mass, which might have acted as the seeds for galaxy formation.

Astronomers would love to study this fascinating and important era of the universe, but detecting first light is incredibly challenging. Compared to massive, bright galaxies of today, the first objects were very small and due to the constant expansion of the universe, they’re now tens of billions of light years away from Earth. Also, the earliest stars were surrounded by gas left over from their formation and this gas acted like fog that absorbed most of the light. It took several hundred million years for radiation to blast away the fog. This early light is very faint by the time it gets to Earth.

But this is not the only challenge.

As the universe expands, it continuously stretches the wavelength of light traveling through it. This is called redshift because it shifts light of shorter wavelengths – like blue or white light – to longer wavelengths like red or infrared light. Though not a perfect analogy, it is similar to how when a car drives past you, the pitch of any sounds it is making drops noticeably.

Similar to how a pitch of a sound drops if the source is moving away from you, the wavelength of light stretches due to the expansion of the universe.

By the time light emitted by an early star or galaxy 13 billion years ago reaches any telescope on Earth, it has been stretched by a factor of 10 by the expansion of the universe. It arrives as infrared light, meaning it has a wavelength longer than that of red light. To see first light, you have to be looking for infrared light.

[The Conversation’s science, health and technology editors pick their favorite stories. Weekly on Wednesdays.]

Telescope as a time machine

Enter the James Webb Space Telescope.

Telescopes are like time machines. If an object is 10,000 light-years away, that means the light takes 10,000 years to reach Earth. So the further out in space astronomers look, the further back in time we are looking.

A large golden colored disc with a sensor in the middle and scientists standing below.
The James Webb Space Telescope was specifically designed to detect the oldest galaxies in the universe.
NASA/JPL-Caltech, CC BY-SA

Engineers optimized James Webb for specifically detecting the faint infrared light of the earliest stars or galaxies. Compared to the Hubble Space Telescope, James Webb has a 15 times wider field of view on its camera, collects six times more light and its sensors are tuned to be most sensitive to infrared light.

The strategy will be to stare deeply at one patch of sky for a long time, collecting as much light and information from the most distant and oldest galaxies as possible. With this data, it may be possible to answer when and how the Dark Ages ended, but there are many other important discoveries to be made. For example, unraveling this story may also help explain the nature of dark matter, the mysterious form of matter that makes up about 80% of the mass of the universe.

James Webb is the most technically difficult mission NASA has ever attempted. But I think the scientific questions it may help answer will be worth every ounce of effort. I and other astronomers are waiting excitedly for the data to start coming back sometime in 2022.The Conversation

Chris Impey, University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.THE

Telescope
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
The Conversation
  • Website

Related Posts

Daybreak Chair Quits After R625K Payout Amid Chicken Crisis

2025-05-11

Water Crisis Multi Sector Dialogue Sparks Bold Solutions

2025-05-09

McDonald’s South Africa Launches New McCrispy Chicken Burger

2025-05-07

Win R5,000 – Round Three: EPF & TechFinancials News Q&A Competition

2025-05-07

Information Regulator’s Bold Plan: Tackling Data Breaches & PAIA Compliance

2025-05-07

SAPO Aims To Be Digitally Connected & Financially Stable By 2028

2025-05-06

Telkom Modernises Business Support Systems For Seamless Customer Interactions

2025-05-06

SITA’s Digital Transformation Roadmap: Ambitious Plans, But Will They Work?

2025-05-02

SA Home Affairs, SARB Co-Developing Digital ID For Secure Online Verification

2025-05-01
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

DON'T MISS
Breaking News

Microsoft Cuts 6,000 Jobs, 3% of Workforce, Amid Restructuring

Microsoft on Tuesday said that it’s laying off 3% of employees across all levels, teams,…

Minister Nkabane Appoints ANC Cadres, Mantashe’s Son To SETA Boards

2025-05-13

TV Licences Are Outdated, But Is A Streaming Levy The Right Fix?

2025-03-17

US-China Trade Wars: Their Impact On Africa

2025-03-07
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
OUR PICKS

Still No Ruling: Makate vs Vodacom Stalls As Court Keeps SA Waiting

2025-05-14

Investec Applies For Electricity Trading Licence In SA

2025-05-14

Phygital Shopping Rises In SA: Blending Online & In-Store

2025-04-18

Foreigner Nabbed With 554 Cellphones Worth R2.5m In Bloemfontein

2025-04-18

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news from TechFinancials about telecoms, fintech and connected life.

About Us

TechFinancials delivers in-depth analysis of tech, digital revolution, fintech, e-commerce, digital banking and breaking tech news.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit RSS
Our Picks

EFF MP Forcibly Removed After Challenging DG On Mantashe Son’s SETA Role

2025-05-14

DA Exposes SAPS Body Camera Delay: No Cameras Deployed Yet

2025-05-14

Still No Ruling: Makate vs Vodacom Stalls As Court Keeps SA Waiting

2025-05-14
Recent Posts
  • EFF MP Forcibly Removed After Challenging DG On Mantashe Son’s SETA Role
  • DA Exposes SAPS Body Camera Delay: No Cameras Deployed Yet
  • Still No Ruling: Makate vs Vodacom Stalls As Court Keeps SA Waiting
  • Investec Applies For Electricity Trading Licence In SA
  • SA Prepares Trade Package For Trump Meeting
TechFinancials
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube WhatsApp
  • Homepage
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • About
© 2025 TechFinancials. Designed by TFS Media.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.