Physicists Leo Stodolsky of MPP and Joseph Silk of the Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris have developed theoretical models suggesting that powerful bursts of energy in the very early cosmos could have left behind detectable signals still reaching Earth today. These hypothetical "cosmic explosions" may have occurred during the birth of "baby universes" or the formation of supermassive primordial black holes, producing penetrating particles capable of escaping the universe's earliest opaque phase.
Because the first 380,000 years of the universe are hidden behind an impenetrable curtain of plasma, direct observation of those epochs is impossible. The earliest currently visible radiation-the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)-dates from that later period. However, Stodolsky and Silk suggest that new types of signals may have passed through that cosmic veil, providing unprecedented access to the universe's first moments.
Their study explores three potential pathways to detect such signals. Two involve neutrinos-ghostly particles produced in high-energy environments and capable of traversing vast distances without interaction.
The researchers hope their framework will inspire new approaches in experimental astrophysics. If confirmed, these early-universe signals would provide an unprecedented glimpse into the physics of the Big Bang itself-revealing how the first particles and forces arose and transforming our understanding of cosmic origins.
Research Report:Signals of Bursts from the Very Early Universe
Research Report:Positron signal from the early Universe
Related Links
Max Planck Institute for Physics
Understanding Time and Space
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