Tuesday, July 12, 2011

First Light, God's handiwork in Creation and the Big Bang



Jack Dikian
July 2011

Ever since I was a young boy I’ve been fascinated by the biblical statement "Let there be light" (Genesis 1:3). I still remember the curiosity and what must have been a child's wide eye - learning the scripture at school and church.

Much later I became interested in cosmology theory, Big Bangs, string landscapes and all the time holding on to my earlier notions of a first dawn, a first light.

Much has been written (speculated rather) about how the universe might have unfolded a few seconds after the big bang. Consider the Planck epoch (up to 10–43 seconds after the Big Bang) dealing with an unimaginably small period of time after the big bang where, perhaps, forces as we know them today might have been indistinguishable (viz a viz unification). Or consider the Inflationary epoch, a period between 10–36 seconds and 10–32 seconds after the Big Bang where it’s thought the universe went through rapid expansion and provided for the early seeds of structure to be laid down.

It isn’t until the Photon epoch however (between 10 seconds and 380,000 years after the Big Bang) when neutral atoms begin to form and the universe begins to became transparent to visible light.

First Light

So the early universe was dense, hot, and shared little resemblance to what we have today. Photons would be reflected and scattered randomly in a largely "opaque" universe. As the universe continues to cool over the first 380,000 years or so, electrons and nuclei began to form atoms and photons are no longer strongly interacting with stable atoms. At this point photons begin to travel through the universe more freely as the universe became transparent to light, and so there is light.

Interestingly, these photons are still traveling today and can be detected as the "cosmic microwave background radiation”. Almost 1% of the static we notice on our television screens when we are switching between channels (all those in-between channels) is remarkably the noise of the early universe - the after glow.