EPISODE · Mar 7, 2026 · 1 MIN
**COBE's Big Bang Afterglow: Mapping the Universe's Infancy**
from Astronomy Tonight · host Inception Point AI
# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. **March 7th: The Night the Cosmos Revealed Its Secrets** On this date in astronomical history, we celebrate one of the most profound discoveries in modern astronomy: **March 7, 1989 – the launch of the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite!** Picture this: Scientists and engineers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center had just sent a spacecraft into the heavens with a mission so audacious, so technically challenging, that many thought it bordered on impossible. The COBE satellite was designed to do something that sounds almost poetic – to detect the faint "afterglow" of the Big Bang itself: the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation. Now, here's where it gets genuinely thrilling. The CMB is incredibly faint, just 2.7 Kelvin above absolute zero – that's almost incomprehensibly cold. COBE had to be sensitive enough to detect temperature variations of just a few millionths of a degree across the entire sky. Imagine trying to find the difference between two ice cubes when they're separated by billions of light-years! Over the following years, COBE would provide humanity with the most detailed map of the universe's infancy ever captured, essentially giving us a baby picture of the cosmos itself. The data revealed tiny temperature fluctuations that would eventually become galaxies, stars, and – well, us! If you found this cosmic journey fascinating, please **subscribe to the Astronomy Tonight podcast** for more mind-bending discoveries from the universe. If you want more information, check out **Quiet Please dot AI**. Thank you for listening to another **Quiet Please Production!**
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**COBE's Big Bang Afterglow: Mapping the Universe's Infancy**
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