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cosmic background radiation
(redirected from cosmic microwave background radiation)

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cosmic background radiation

Electromagnetic radiation left over from the original formation of the universe in the Big Bang between 10 and 20 billion years ago. It corresponds to an overall background temperature of 2.73 K (−270.4°C/−454.8°F), or approximately 3°C above absolute zero.

Cosmic background radiation was first detected in 1965 by US physicists Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, who in 1978 shared the Nobel Prize for Physics for their discovery. In 1992 the US Cosmic Background Explorer satellite detected slight ‘ripples’ in the strength of cosmic background radiation that are believed to mark the first stage in the formation of galaxies. On 30 June 2001, NASA launched the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, which has measured and mapped the temperature of the cosmic background radiation over the entire sky.



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This chart includes all known ranges of EMR including: gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet light, visible light, infrared, microwaves, radio waves (ULF, VLF, LF, MF, HF, long, short, HAM, VHF, UHF, SHF, EHF), cosmic microwave background radiation and brain waves, all organized by octaves.
It wasn't until the mid-1960s that scientists using radio astronomy discovered cosmic microwave background radiation and pushed the Big Bang theory into prominence.
Before that, the universe was so hot that there were no neutral atoms, only ions and electrons that trapped the cosmic microwave background radiation.
 
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