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The Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) collaboration, which includes researchers from the University of Toronto, recently produced the clearest images yet of the universe's infancy from the earliest ...
New research has unveiled images of the universe in its infancy—a mere 388,000 after the Big Bang. The snaps of the universe ...
New observations with the Atacama Cosmology Telescope in Chile reveal the earliest-ever "baby pictures" of our universe, showing some of the oldest light we can possibly see.
Sure, they're not your typical baby pictures. But a global team of researchers says new images published this week show some of the clearest visualizations yet of the universe in its infancy.
Considering the universe is pushing 14 billion years old, the images ACT produced are essentially "hours-old baby pictures of the cosmos," the release said. "These images have allowed us to answer ...
And while 388,000 years may seem like an indescribably long time to humans, the universe is currently around 13.8 billion years old—meaning these photos are equivalent to "hours-old baby ...