Stars and Galaxies.
Planck Exposes Ancient Light of Our Universe
Jet Propulsion Laboratory https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ March 21, 2013
This animation illustrates the painstaking work performed by scientists to extract the oldest light in our universe, called the cosmic microwave background, from maps of the whole sky taken by the Planck mission.
Transcript
The Planck mission was designed to measure the cosmic microwave background better than it's ever been measured before. It sees light from stars, from star-forming regions and galaxies. It sees light from electrons in the Milky Way.
We can remove that light from the image. It sees radio emissions from the Milky Way.
We take that light out. It sees light from dust in the Milky Way.
We can remove that light. When we take all of those other sources of light away, we're left with the cosmic microwave background itself --the oldest light in the universe, traveling towards us for 13.8 billion years and showing us the universe in its infancy.
We can remove that light from the image. It sees radio emissions from the Milky Way.
We take that light out. It sees light from dust in the Milky Way.
We can remove that light. When we take all of those other sources of light away, we're left with the cosmic microwave background itself --the oldest light in the universe, traveling towards us for 13.8 billion years and showing us the universe in its infancy.