Imagine If Earth Were Teleported to the Edge of the Universe
Let me take you on a wild ride to the very edges of
our Universe. But it won't be as simple as traveling through space. Because the
edges that we’re talking about aren’t in space. They’re in time. The Universe
doesn't have the kind of edge you might imagine. But there is a limit to how
far into outer space we can see from Earth. And the part that we can see is
called the observable Universe. The observable Universe does have an edge. But
it's not a border in space. It’s a border in time.
When we look out into space, we see the stars and
galaxies from the past. And the deeper into the Universe we look, the farther
back in time we see. So, join me on this mind-bending trip back in time to the
very beginning of the Universe. It seems pretty weird that our telescopes look
into the past. But it all has to do with how light travels. Take the Sun, for
example. It's located about 150 million km (93 million mi) from Earth. So, if
you look outside, the light that you see was emitted from the Sun eight minutes
ago. The further an object is from Earth, the longer it takes for its light to
reach you. And that’s why, when we look into space, we're looking backward in
time. Just how far back in time is that observable edge?
Well, using the Hubble Space Telescope, we’ve been
able to look back 13 billion years. We can see what the Universe looked like
mere 400 to 800 million years after the Big Bang. But enough about telescopes.
Let’s start teleporting. Our first stop would be 19 billion light-years away.
At this point, the visible Universe would be 3 billion years old. The Earth
wouldn't exist yet, but stars would be bursting into existence. They would be
forming 20-30 times faster than they are today. And there would be vast amounts
of radiation as active supermassive black holes feasted on the surrounding
matter. Next, we’d teleport to a visible point 27 billion light-years away. The
Universe would be 1 billion years old. Here, fewer stars would be forming. Heavy
elements would be rare at this point in time, so there would be no rocky,
Earth-like planets yet. Galaxies would be less
developed and filled with young stars. And everything would be bathed in a hot
cosmic microwave background. We’d reach the first edge when the Universe is 700
to 800 million years old. This is called the edge of transparency. At this
stage, the Universe would be filled with hot, opaque, glowing gas. Only
infrared telescopes can see past the edge of transparency. The second edge we
would reach is 31 billion light-years away from Earth. And it's called the age
of reionization. The Universe would be 550 million years old. The gas that we
encountered before would be gone, and the Universe would be mostly transparent.
The most distant galaxy ever observed is 32 billion light-years from Earth.
There, the Universe would only be 400 million years old.
That is the farthest our telescopes can see. But there
are indirect signs that stars formed earlier, giving us a view deeper into
space and time. If we teleported to a time when the Universe was only 50 to 100
million years old, you’d see the very first stars forming. Before this, the
Universe was dark. But if we went further back into time, you’d witness another
visible edge. At the young age of 3 million years old, the Universe would be
bathed in radiation so hot, you could see it with your naked eye. It would be
like a red glow. And the furthest point we’d teleport to would be 46 billion
light-years away.
This would be the last and most significant edge of the Universe, the ultra-energetic stage of the Big Bang. We call this an edge because we can’t see further than this point. But it’s not the physical edge of the Universe. So, is there a solid edge out there that you could peek over? No, and here’s why. The Universe is constantly expanding. But it’s not expanding into anything. It’s more like the surface of a ball. If you walked along the surface of a giant ball, you'd end up where you started. But you'd never encounter a physical edge.
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