eli5 How can we see the first light of the universe?

192 views

So I understand that light travels at a constant speed and that as we look at other galaxies we see them as they were when the light left that galaxy. My question is more to the thought that as the universe expands from the big bang and galaxies are formed, wouldn’t the process of creating everything we know take longer than it takes the light to travel from there to here. So wouldn’t the limit of visible light only be as old as the time it takes to travel? How can we see “The first light after the big bang” as so many scientific groups are trying to do? I’m not sure if I explained my question well. Please give me some leeway.

In: 2

3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

I think I see your question, but I’m not 100%. Thing is: light existed *before* stars and galaxies and planets and whatnot. In fact, the earliest known light source is the big bang itself, but much of that light has been lost to us because of the inflationary period immediately following. The first detectable light is the CMB, or Cosmic Microwave Background, which we’ve already been looking at for a number of years, and if you haven’t heard the story if its’ discovery, you should look into it. All that being said, we’re actually trying to look for the first light emitted by stars and galaxies, so, good on ya for getting that. And you’re right about light traveling at a fixed speed and about there being a distance limit associated with that. There are all kinds of boundaries to what we can **ever** know, but we aren’t there yet, and that’s what we’re trying to get to. It’s actually way more complicated than a simple reddit answer can provide, but, out to about 14.5 billion light years or so, we will **eventually** be able to see those stars and galaxies, and beyond that, the expansion of the universe between us and them is occurring so fast that the light will never get to us. Now, because we’re looking both *out* AND *back*, we can see light from within that 14.5 billion light year sphere from 14.5 billion years ago (give or take), and that is the approximate age of the universe, so by looking at the farthest stars, we’re also looking at the oldest stars.

So, the light travels at 300000kps and every single part of the universe is expanding away from every other part at a known rate, such that the farther away something is, the faster it is moving away from us because of that expansion. Think of a turkey. Stick a flavor-infuser in it and watch as the two sides get farther apart as you pump the flavor in. Now do it with 3 infusers, spaced equally apart and you’ll see that the ends get farther away from one another than any parts of the middle. Same thing. Eventually, there are enough universal “flavor-infusers” that the ends are actually getting farther apart FASTER than light can travel between them. It’s not a violation of the speed of light, because the speed of light is about light crossing space and has nothing to do with the space *itself* expanding.

Hope this helps

*note 1: my numbers are only Approximate. Please don’t give me grief on their precision (or lack thereof)

You are viewing 1 out of 3 answers, click here to view all answers.