COBE's infrared view of the universe 9/01/1998
The brightness of the full sky as seen in infrared light.
A view of the sky after the foreground glow of the solar system dust has been extracted.
After the infrared light from our solar system and galaxy has been removed, what remains is a uniform cosmic infrared background.
These three pictures are maps of the full sky as seen in infrared light. The top two are composite images taken in wavelengths of 60, 100, and 240 micrometers. The 60-micrometer brightness is shown in blue, the 100- micrometer brightness in green, and the 240-micrometer brightness in red. The bottom image shows just the 240-micrometer brightness after foreground light from the solar system and Galaxy has been removed.
Go to full text
Click here to return to the Galaxies' topics
Image Credit: Michael Hauser (Space Telescope Science Institute), the COBE/DIRBE Science Team, and NASA)  

These three pictures are maps of the full sky as seen in infrared light. The top two are composite images taken in wavelengths of 60, 100, and 240 micrometers. The 60-micrometer brightness is shown in blue, the 100- micrometer brightness in green, and the 240-micrometer brightness in red. The bottom image shows just the 240-micrometer brightness after foreground light from the solar system and Galaxy has been removed.

The images were compiled from data taken between December 1989 and September 1990 by the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) on board NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE). They illustrate the steps scientists used to find the cosmic infrared background, which is a radiative fossil containing cumulative starlight which now appears in the infrared due to the cosmic redshift and by absorption and re-emission by dust in the universe since the Big Bang.

 
Return to top of page