The idea of existence of parallel universes is not new but
trying to find any evidence to prove it is quite hard. But one cosmologist
claims to have found evidence of a parallel universe touching against our own
universe as far back at the beginning of time. So before we go deep into this
you might need to recall how the universe came into existence, Big Bang. For
hundreds of thousands of years afterwards the Big Bang, the particles that were
present at that time were too hot and energetic to form into atoms: the point
at which atoms started forming, some 300,000 years after the Big Bang, is
called as recombination. It also highlight the time when cosmic background
radiation (CMB) started scattering over the Cosmos - a signal researchers use
to look back into time and develop their theories.
What cosmologist Chary has spotted is a crash or a 'bruise'
in this cosmic background radiation - and that may perhaps mean a collision
with a parallel universe. Cosmologists consider that the 'bubbles' of distinct
universes could be bumping with each other, dumping some material along the
way, just like usual soap bubbles bouncing into each other would. Understanding
CMB signals is extremely difficult, and Chary himself considers there's a 30
percent chance that what he's discovered is just background noise and not a
tell-tale mark of a neighboring universe at all. It might also be a large spot
of space dust.
The data used by Chary was gathered from the European Space
Agency's powerful Planck telescope. By deducting CMB models from Planck's image
of the Cosmos, he revealed patches of signals some 4,500 times perkier than
they should have been, so based on the number of protons and electrons
researchers believe existed in the very early universe.
At this [point, it's just an theory, and looking billions of
years back into the past isn't at all that easy, but progress is being made
just all the time. In a research paper Published online at arXiv.org, he writes
"Unusual claims like evidence for alternate universes require a very high
burden of proof. Searching for these alternate universes is a challenge."
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