Will the James Webb Telescope provide images of the Big Bang?

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Will the James Webb Telescope provide images of the Big Bang?

NASA has shocked the world by publishing pictures of galaxies from about 1,300 billion years ago. NASA has previously sent several telescopes into space to capture images of many distant galaxies. But they may is galaxies formed 30-40 million years ago. .There was surprise in him. People are now seeing the possibility of knowing more information about the universeNow people are thinking, if it is possible to capture a picture of a galaxy in the space about 1 thousand 3 billion years ago, then it might be possible to show a picture of the beginning of the creation of this universe. .Because, space scientists say, this universe started about 1,380 million years ago through the Big Bang. Now the picture of 1 thousand 3 billion years ago has arrived. Then it is only a matter of time to get a picture of the universe just a few million years ago.


But scientists say the James Webb Telescope may be able to capture images of an earlier galaxy, but not the beginning of the Big Bang. Why? That's what I'm saying. An extensive article on this topic was recently published in the Science Times of The New York Times. Kenneth Chang's brief appeared online in The New York Times on July 19. What do scientists say?


Various features of the Big Bang have been explained by astronomers at various times before. NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer and the European Space Agency's Planck mission have analyzed much of the data. As a result, many things about the Big Bang are known. .If so, why can't the James Webb Space Telescope capture images of the Big Bang?


The main reason for this is that the James Webb Telescope can do the impossible. Because this telescope can pick up infrared light emitted from distant galaxies.


But cosmological observations have shown that the wavelength of microwaves emitted during the Big Bang was much larger than the wavelength of infrared light. As a result, it will not be detected by the James Webb telescope.


So we may have to wait a little longer to get a picture of the Big Bang. Newer telescopes may make this impossible in the near future.

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