8.8A 2.0 EXPLAIN STEMscopedia English
8.8A 2.0 EXPLAIN STEMscopedia English
8.8A 2.0 EXPLAIN STEMscopedia English
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When you look up at the night sky, thousands of objects sparkle into view. If you gazed
through a telescope, you would see many more of these
objects. You are observing stars, which give off energy in the
form of visible light.
However, the stars you can see are only a very small portion
of the universe. What objects in space, other than stars, make
up the universe? What kinds of energy, other than light, do
these objects give off? And how do scientists answer these
and otherquestions about objects that are so far away?
The universe encompasses all of space, time, matter, and energy.
The universe contains everything that exists, from particles of matter smaller than an atom
to the largest stars. The universe also includes all forms of energy, from the light you see
streaming from stars to invisible radio waves and X-Rays. Even time is part of the universe.
Scientists think of time as beginning when the universe began.
All the matter and energy in the universe is contained in a volume of space that scientists
have discovered is constantly expanding. The expanding universe is similar to a balloon that
is constantly inating. Scientists do not know how large the universe is now. However, they
have gathered evidence that the
universe started very small and has
grown in all directions ever since.
The most distant objects that have
been detected are about 13.7lightyears away from Earth. A light-year
is a unit of distance. It is equal to
the distance traveled by light in
one year, which is approximately
9.5trillion kilometers. So, light from
the most distant objects scientists
have observed began its journey
The phototaken by a satellite in 2003shows
to Earth 13.7billion years ago.
the most distant part of the universe that has
If these objects are actually the
been observed from Earth. The different colors
most distant objects in space,
are masses of matter as they were a short time
they are also the farthest back in
after the universe was born. These masses of
time. For these reasons, scientists
matter would later become stars and galaxies.
estimate the universe is about
13.7billionyears old.
From its birth to the present, the universe has changed tremendously. Huge pockets of gas
have been pulled together by gravity to form stars. In turn, these stars have been drawn
together by gravity to form families of billions of stars. Stars born long ago developed, aged,
and died. This process goes on today, and it will continue to go on in the future.
look out!
You may have difculty imagining how gravity can pull together gases to form stars.
Remember that gases, like all forms of matter, are composed of particles in motion. These
particles are tiny, but they have mass, and so they are affected by gravity. As the density of
a gas increases, gas particles collide more frequently and with greater force, causing the
gass temperature to increase as well. Eventually, gases can become so hot they ignite,
becoming huge, burning spheres, or stars.
Although the concept of black holes is still being investigated, scientists have several
theories about how they form and affect nearby matter and energy. As extremely massive
stars age, they begin to collapse. Scientists think the matter in these stars is drawn inward,
creating an extremely small yet dense object. A black hole the size of a pea could have the
mass of Earth!
Scientists once assumed the gravity of black holes pulled everything into them forever, like
super-powerful whirlpools. However, Hawking has theorized that black holes give off some
kinds of radiation. If so, black holes should be detectable. As it turns out, scientists have
uncovered evidence of a black hole at the center of our very own galaxy!