Microwave Hotspots: The Oldest Structures Known
These spots are the oldest, most distant structures known.
They are seen on the above two images of the microwave sky, north and south of our galaxy's equator, based on four-year's worth of data from NASA's
COsmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite (1989-1993).
The spots represent temperature variations in the
early universe.
As our
universe expanded and cooled, conglomerations of mass formed.
These COBE images confirmed that only a
million years after the big-bang -
which occurred roughly 15 billion years ago - parts of the
universe
were visibly hotter than other parts.
By studying the size and distribution of the spots found on the
microwave background,
astronomers hope to learn what matter and
processes caused the spots to form - and hence determine the
composition, density, and future of our Universe.
Results from
recent measurements
of the cosmic microwave background are consistent with a
universe stranger than previously thought,
possibly filled with
unexpected forms of
dark matter and dark energy.
A more detailed analysis might result after
NASA's
Microwave Anisotropy Probe
is launched in 2001.