The right panel is an image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope of stars and galaxies in the Ursa Major constellation. This infrared image covers a region of space so large that light would take up to 100 million years to travel across it. The left panel is the same image after stars, galaxies and other sources were masked out. The remaining background light is from a period of time when the universe was less than one billion years old, and most likely originated from the universe's very first groups of objects -- either huge stars or voracious black holes. Darker shades in the image on the left correspond to dimmer parts of the background glow, while yellow and white show the brightest light.
Addeddate
2009-10-06 01:34:00
Constellation
Ursa Major
Exposuredate
May 19, 2004 - May 26 2004
Exposuretime
24 hours per pixel
Identifier
SPITZ-ssc2006-22a
Imagescale
972 by 610 pixels with 0.6 arcsec pixels
Insightuid
nasaNAS~12~12~64357~168873
Instrument
IRAC
Objectname
Hubble Deep Field, Cosmic Infrared Background
Objecttype
Galaxy Field
Observers
A. Kashlinsky (Goddard Space Flight Center) R. G. Arendt (Goddard Space Flight Center) J. Mather (Goddard Space Flight Center) S. H. Moseley (Goddard Space Flight Center)
Orientation
N is 139.9 degrees CW from up
Position
*RA: *12h36m49.50s *Dec: *62d12m58.00s
Relation
NASA Telescope Picks Up Glow of Universe's First Objects [ http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/releases/ssc2006-22/release.shtml ]