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Astronomers glimpse the dawn of the universe, 13.6 billion years ago

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This handout photo released by Nature on February 28, 2018 shows an artist's rendering of how the first stars in the universe may have looked. Photo: NATURE – NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION/N.R. FULLER via AFP
Associated Press

For the first time, astronomers have glimpsed the dawn of the universe 13.6 billion years ago when the earliest stars were just beginning to glow after the Big Bang. And if that’s not enough, they may have detected mysterious dark matter at work, too.

The glimpse consisted of a faint radio signal from deep space, picked up by an antenna that is slightly bigger than a refrigerator and costs less than US$5 million.

But in certain ways the modest machine can go back much farther in time and distance than the celebrated, multibillion-dollar Hubble Space Telescope.
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Judd Bowman of Arizona State University, lead author of a study in Wednesday’s journal Nature, said the signal came from the very first objects in the universe as it was emerging out of darkness 180 million years after the Big Bang.

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Seeing the universe just lighting up, even though it was only a faint signal, is even more important than the Big Bang because “we are made of star stuff and so we are glimpsing at our origin,” said astronomer Richard Ellis, who was not involved in the project.

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