Close Menu
  • Home
  • UNSUBSCRIBE
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Travel
Facebook X (Twitter) WhatsApp
Trending
  • Cheryl Burke Reveals Why She Legally Changed Her Name
  • Hamas seeks to reassert its authority in Gaza
  • Trump admits limited Virginia involvement as 2025 election approaches
  • YouTube Shorts finally adds daily time limit. Here’s how to get it.
  • Jay Bothroyd: Former Premier League striker joins England Golf’s Game Changers initiative and explains why he loves the sport | Golf News
  • Kardashians Season 7: Where Kendall Jenner Lost Virginity
  • Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat’s Terry Rozier arrested in federal gambling-related investigation
  • Tropical Storm Melissa puts Caribbean’s most flood-vulnerable places at risk
Facebook X (Twitter) WhatsApp
Baynard Media
  • Home
  • UNSUBSCRIBE
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Travel
Baynard Media
Home»Lifestyle»Epoch of Reionization: Astronomers close in on signal from ‘one of the most unexplored periods in our universe’
Lifestyle

Epoch of Reionization: Astronomers close in on signal from ‘one of the most unexplored periods in our universe’

EditorBy EditorOctober 16, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Long before starlight filled the cosmos for the first time, the young universe may have been simmering, according to a new study.

The findings suggest that about 800 million years after the Big Bang, energy from newborn black holes and the fading embers of the first stars was already warming vast clouds of intergalactic hydrogen gas, offering a rare glimpse into a largely uncharted chapter of the universe’s youth.

The results also bring astronomers a step closer to detecting a faint radio signal known as the 21-centimeter hydrogen line, an elusive imprint that could reveal the properties of those primordial stars and black holes that reionized the cosmos.


You may like

“It’s one of the most unexplored periods in our universe,” study co-author Ridhima Nunhokee, a research scientist at the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research in Perth, Australia, told Live Science. “There’s just so much to learn.”

Astronomers know that the universe began in an extremely hot, dense state, the Big Bang, about 13.8 billion years ago, and then cooled rapidly as it expanded. Roughly 400,000 years later, temperatures dropped enough for protons and electrons to merge into neutral hydrogen atoms, and the cosmos slipped into the “cosmic dark ages” — a long, lightless stretch when space was veiled by a dense fog of hydrogen gas.

Hundreds of millions of years later, the first generations of massive stars and faint young galaxies ignited, emitting intense ultraviolet light that slowly burned away this fog in a transformative period known as the Epoch of Reionization. That process, which ended about 1 billion years after the Big Bang, made the universe transparent and allowed starlight to travel freely through space for the first time, marking the dawn of the cosmos as we know it.

What the universe was like as it began to emerge from those dark ages remains one of astronomy’s biggest open questions.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

The new findings, detailed in a paper published Sept. 30 in The Astrophysical Journal, suggest that before the universe “lit up,” it may not have been as frigid as many models predict. By narrowing the possibilities for what the early cosmos was like, the results offer an important new clue to understanding how the first stars and galaxies began to reshape their environment, researchers say.

The radio sky image (background) represents the cleanest signal ever produced from data collected by the Murchison Widefield Array (foreground) in Western Australia.

The radio sky image (background) represents the cleanest signal ever produced from data collected by the Murchison Widefield Array (foreground) in Western Australia. (Image credit: Nunhokee et al/ICRAR/Curtin University)

The universe’s echoes

Because direct observation of the universe’s first stars isn’t possible — they were too faint, too short-lived, and far too distant for even the most powerful telescopes to detect — astronomers instead look for the subtle fingerprints those stars left in the hydrogen gas that surrounded them.

In the new study, Nunhokee and her team analyzed nearly a decade’s worth of data from the Murchison Widefield Array, a powerful radio telescope located in the remote Western Australian desert, to search for a faint radio “whisper” from that ancient hydrogen.


You may like

The signal arises when a hydrogen atom’s sole proton and electron flip their spins relative to each other — a minute change that alters the atom’s energy and causes it to emit or absorb a photon at a specific wavelength. Astronomers hunt for the faint radio echo of this transition, which appears at a wavelength of 21 centimeters — or, to our instruments, a frequency of about 1.42 gigahertz. Because the signal’s strength is affected by the temperature and environment of the surrounding hydrogen gas, it acts like a cosmic thermometer, revealing how the first stars and black holes began to influence the early universe.

Detecting this ancient signal, however, is extraordinarily difficult. It is buried beneath layers of much stronger radio noise from the Milky Way, other nearby galaxies, Earth’s atmosphere and even the telescope itself. To uncover it, the team developed a new statistical filtering technique to strip away these foreground signals and isolate the most probable emission from hydrogen gas dating to roughly 800 million years after the Big Bang.

This new approach produced the cleanest radio map yet of the early universe and set the most stringent limits so far on the strength of the 21-centimeter signal, the team noted in the study.

Despite focusing on what Nunhokee described as “kind of a cold patch where we have just a few sources,” and using “the best data that we have,” the team found no evidence for the telltale signal. “Because it’s very faint, it’s very hard,” she said.

After cleaning the data, the researchers didn’t see the distinctive signature that would indicate a “cold start” to reionization. This feature would have been visible in their data if the universe, about 800 million years after the Big Bang, had remained frigid until the first stars ignited, so the result suggested the universe was warmer than expected, according to the study.

“As the universe evolved, the gas between galaxies expands and cools, so we would expect it to be very, very cold,” study lead author Cathryn Trott, a professor at the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, said in a statement. “Our measurements show that it is at least heated by a certain amount. Not by a lot, but it tells us that very cold reionisation is ruled out — that’s really interesting.”

Cosmological models point to X-rays from early black holes and the remnants of massive stars as the likely culprits heating the intergalactic gas long before visible starlight filled the cosmos, Nunhokee said.

The team’s new data-cleaning technique also lays crucial groundwork for the upcoming Square Kilometre Array (SKA). Scientists say this next-generation radio telescope, which is now under construction in Australia and South Africa, will have the sensitivity to detect the elusive 21-centimeter signal directly.

“We know what we are looking for,” Nunhokee said. “We just need a few hours of [SKA’s] data that will allow us to go to the levels that we want to.”

Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleRep. Katherine Clark says healthcare is Dems’ key issue amid 16-day government shutdown
Next Article Trump says he will meet with Putin in Hungary for more talks on ending the war in Ukraine
Editor
  • Website

Related Posts

Lifestyle

Tropical Storm Melissa puts Caribbean’s most flood-vulnerable places at risk

October 23, 2025
Lifestyle

Science history: Scientists use ‘click chemistry’ to watch molecules in living organisms — Oct. 23, 2007

October 23, 2025
Lifestyle

You don’t need to be very happy to avoid an early death from chronic disease, study finds

October 23, 2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Categories
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
Recent Posts
  • Cheryl Burke Reveals Why She Legally Changed Her Name
  • Hamas seeks to reassert its authority in Gaza
  • Trump admits limited Virginia involvement as 2025 election approaches
  • YouTube Shorts finally adds daily time limit. Here’s how to get it.
  • Jay Bothroyd: Former Premier League striker joins England Golf’s Game Changers initiative and explains why he loves the sport | Golf News
calendar
October 2025
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Sep    
Recent Posts
  • Cheryl Burke Reveals Why She Legally Changed Her Name
  • Hamas seeks to reassert its authority in Gaza
  • Trump admits limited Virginia involvement as 2025 election approaches
About

Welcome to Baynard Media, your trusted source for a diverse range of news and insights. We are committed to delivering timely, reliable, and thought-provoking content that keeps you informed
and inspired

Categories
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • UNSUBSCRIBE
© 2025 copyrights reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.