Kısaca
Sound can’t travel in space, yet the universe carries a leftover trace. The cosmic microwave background behaves like the oldest light from the Big Bang, mapping tiny temperature ripples.
We imagine space as silent—and we’re right: sound needs a medium. But the universe has a habit of leaving traces; silence doesn’t mean nothingness.\n\nThe cosmic microwave background is light emitted when the universe was very young, now reaching us. As the universe expanded, that light cooled and shifted into microwaves, like a faint glow from the past.\n\nSurprising detail: it isn’t perfectly smooth. It carries tiny temperature ripples that can be read as the ‘seeds’ of future galaxies.\n\nIt matters because we understand the cosmos not only by staring at stars, but by measuring the invisible background. That quiet hum tells the oldest memory of the beginning.