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  • If the Universe is full of stars,

  • why doesn't it appear white?

  • And if it did, what would it look like?

  • This is WHAT IF,

  • and here's what would happen

  • if the Universe was white instead of black.

  • Let me break something to you.

  • Black is not a color...

  • as far as physics is concerned.

  • By definition, color is the visible spectrum of light waves.

  • A black object absorbs all the colors in the spectrum,

  • making "black" an absence of any color.

  • On the other hand, "white" is a mixture of all colors,

  • and it contains all wavelengths of visible light.

  • Color is about our sensory perception of the world.

  • But going back to the background of the Universe,

  • you could say it was white once.

  • When the Universe was born from the Big Bang,

  • it didn't have any stars to emit light.

  • It was opaque with a hot soup

  • of protons, electrons and neutrons.

  • After about 300,000 years, space cooled down

  • and those particles began pairing up

  • into atoms and molecules.

  • The Universe became transparent.

  • But to you, it would appear absolutely dark.

  • Because not a single light source had formed yet.

  • This was the era of cosmic dark ages.

  • It ended when the first stars started fusing hydrogen into helium.

  • Those stars were up to 300 times more massive than our Sun,

  • and a million times brighter.

  • They shined for a few million years

  • before they exploded as supernovas.

  • The growing radiation from the those first stars

  • ionized hydrogen atoms -

  • split them back into protons and electrons.

  • That's when the dark Universe lit up,

  • filled with ultraviolet protons.

  • So, why didn't it stay that way?

  • Why with all the new stars and new galaxies,

  • is our night sky no longer bright?

  • You see, if the Universe appeared to be white instead of black,

  • it would mean that it's infinitely old,

  • infinitely big and static at the same time.

  • That would make it a different Universe altogether.

  • We know that our Universe is just under 14 billion years old.

  • That might seem like a long time, but remember,

  • even light has its speed limit.

  • We can only see stars that are less than 14 billion light years away from us.

  • The light from more distant stars

  • hasn't had the time to reach Earth yet.

  • As our Universe keeps expanding,

  • the distance between stars is increasing, too.

  • And as distant stars move further away from us,

  • the wavelength of their light increases and shifts towards red.

  • Until it becomes so long that the human eye can't see it anymore.

  • That's another reason for the black background of the Universe.

  • Space is filled with all kinds of radiation,

  • you just can't see it.

  • And what about the black holes?

  • Well, even if a very powerful source of light illuminated our Universe,

  • you still wouldn't see any black holes.

  • Those things have such a strong gravity,

  • that they don't emit any light,

  • and therefore can never be visible.

  • Black is, after all, an absence of color.

  • It would be cool to catch a black hole one day

  • and turn it into an infinite energy source.

  • But that's a story for another WHAT IF.

If the Universe is full of stars,

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