A Year of Resolving Cosmology
			
		
		
			Credit:  
WMAP Science Team, 
NASA
		
		
			This year, humanity learned that the universe is 
13.7 billion years old.  
Before this year, the 
universe's age 
was thought to be about 13 billion years, 
but really only constrained to be between about 12 billion and 
15 billion years old.  
The difference was made, primarily, by a small satellite named the 
Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) 
that had been collecting data in an 
unusual Earth orbit.  
Pictured above is a sky map of the enabling data -- the complete 
cosmic microwave background divided into two hemispheres, 
in detail never before resolved, as recorded by the WMAP's 
first data release.  
Besides universe age, new 
data and analyses of the spots on the 
cosmic microwave background bolstered existing indications that the universe is composed predominantly of a 
strange and mysterious type of 
dark energy (73 percent).  
The remaining matter is only about 4 percent in familiar 
atoms, 
with the remaining 23 percent in a somewhat mysterious type of 
dark matter.  
During the year, much cosmological research shifted from 
trying to find the 
parameters that define our 
universe to trying to use these parameters as a tool for understanding details of how our universe evolved.