Identify the universe

The study results of the latest Big Bang show that the universe is more than 80 million years old compared to previous observations of astronomers.

However, the core concepts of the universe like how to start, what to do and where to go, are still questions that need to be clarified.

Published on March 21, the results of the latest study further confirmed the theory of expansion, which suggested that the universe formed only a few billionths of a second after the explosion from the atomic size and expansion for to the observable space as it is today.

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Photos of the universe map published by ESA on March 21
considered the most detailed ever. (Photo AP)

The Big Bang is the most comprehensive inclusion theory of the origin of the universe, assuming that the original size of the universe is less than 1 atom. A few parts a second after the explosion, the temperature dropped and the universe expanded at a steady rate, much faster than the speed of light.

Planck, the European Space Telescope (ESA) telescope, was launched into space, observed and studied the origin of the Big Bang, and the results published so far are more than 80 million universes. year, age is 13.81 billion years old.

The results also showed that the universe expanded slightly slower, had a little less mysterious dark matter as previously determined results, and scientists also confirmed only a slight change in how to calculate the universe, no breakthrough.

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Planck telescope

The publisher of the Planck telescope, George Esfthathiou, director of the Kavli Institute of Cosmology at Cambridge University, said: 'We have just discovered the fundamental truth about the universe, but that only helps. We understand a little more about the universe '.

The $ 900 million Planck telescope was launched into space in 2009. It underwent 15.5 months of "mapping" space, studying fossil light and sound from the Big Bang. by observing radiation background in the universe. Astronomers expect Planck to continue transmitting data to the earth until the end of 2013, when the coolant of the glass is exhausted.

Some officials at NASA, the agency that also participated in the project, said the newly published results provide a deeper look at the universe's origins and complex structures.