Black Holes Gave Our Baby Universe a Fever

A graph showing the temperature of the intergalactic medium when the universe was between one and three billion years old, overlaid on an artist's impression of the emergence of galaxies over the same period. The shaded region shows the range of possible temperatures measured from the team's data.

The young universe spiked a fever 1.5 billion years or so after the Big Bang, warming up as huge black holes poured out massive amounts of energy, a new study suggests.

The find is something of a surprise, since the universe is generally thought to have cooled down over time. But from 12 billion to 10 billion years ago or so, ultraviolet light emitted from black holes at the centers of galaxies seems to have heated up the gas that spread throughout the cosmos, researchers report. [New illustration of cosmic heating.]

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