Light in space can come from another universe

The amount of light that remains in space is likely to be remnants coming from another universe after the Big Bang.

Light in space can come from another universe

Previously, many scientists hypothesized that our universe is not the only space created by the Big Bang, but may be just a small piece of an object that keeps growing. It is possible that many different universes were created after the explosion. However, we are not yet able to learn more about them.

Picture 1 of Light in space can come from another universe
The Planck Telescope of the European Space Agency flies in orbit.(Photo: ESA).

Recently, in order to find traces, scientists compared the map of cosmic remnant radiation - built through the light left from the early universe, with the entire sky made of telescopes by the telescope. Planck of the European Space Agency took a picture. When comparing and eliminating, they discovered there was a remnant of light in the sky, possibly remnants due to collisions with other universes. The results of the study are published in New Science on October 28.

According to The Independence, the Planck telescope, the source of information for the study, was one of the satellites that flew into orbit in 2009 to explore cosmic microwaves spread across space (CMB). Just before the Big Bang explosion, every material that existed was sucked into a very small energy sphere. This sphere exploded afterwards, creating the universe we live in as well as many other hidden universes.

All the heat inside the sphere of energy cooled down at three levels. These three energy levels form the microwave font, the Planck telescope's research object, along with two other satellites called the Cosmic Background Explorer and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe.

This research could become the basis for the US Space Agency (NASA) to submit a funding proposal for the Pixie Satellite (Primordial Inflation Explorer) for the purpose of understanding the details of the signals, re- reconstructing how the universe expands and identifies search targets before approaching another universe.