Atomic Fog Shrouded Early ‘Dark Age’ of the Universe 
The discovery of a small but distant galaxy  12.8 billion light years from Earth in 2011 provided important clues  about the earliest years of the universe’s life. By measuring the age of  the galaxy’s stars using gravitational lensing, astronomers in Europe  and the US found that the galaxy began to shine when the universe was  just 150–300 million years old, which hints that these galaxies were  responsible for dispersing the atomic fog that shrouded the early  cosmos, during a period in the history of the universe that astronomers  refer to as the “dark age.”
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Atomic Fog Shrouded Early ‘Dark Age’ of the Universe

The discovery of a small but distant galaxy 12.8 billion light years from Earth in 2011 provided important clues about the earliest years of the universe’s life. By measuring the age of the galaxy’s stars using gravitational lensing, astronomers in Europe and the US found that the galaxy began to shine when the universe was just 150–300 million years old, which hints that these galaxies were responsible for dispersing the atomic fog that shrouded the early cosmos, during a period in the history of the universe that astronomers refer to as the “dark age.”

Continue reading “Atomic Fog Shrouded Early ‘Dark Age’ of the Universe ” »