🌌 The Universe — Origin, Composition & Current Affairs
Big Bang Theory · Galaxy Formation · Star Life Cycle · Dark Matter · Dark Energy · Black Holes · Singularity · Event Horizon · JWST 2024-25 · DESI Dark Energy Map · PYQ 2017 & MCQs
Big Bang Timeline. The universe expanded from a single point (t=0, Big Bang) through inflation, nucleosynthesis (H+He formed in 3 minutes), release of the Cosmic Microwave Background at 380,000 years (universe became transparent), formation of first stars and galaxies (200–500 million years), formation of the Solar System (9.2 billion years ago), to the present (13.787 billion years). The cone shape shows space expanding over time.
📋 Stages of the Big Bang — Step by Step
Discovered 1965 (Nobel 1978). Uniform glow of microwaves from all directions — the afterglow of the Big Bang. Temperature: 2.725 K. India's AstroSat also contributes to CMB studies.
Edwin Hubble (1929): all galaxies are moving away from us; farther galaxies recede faster. V = H₀ × d (velocity = Hubble constant × distance). Traced back → all matter was once in one place = Big Bang.
Universe is 75% H and 25% He — exactly what Big Bang nucleosynthesis (first 3 minutes) predicts. If universe had always existed, stars would have converted more hydrogen to heavier elements.
Three Types of Galaxies. Spiral (Milky Way, Andromeda) — disc with spiral arms and central bulge, contains young and old stars. Elliptical — smooth oval shape, mostly old red stars, little dust/gas, largest galaxies in the universe. Irregular — no regular shape, often result of galaxy mergers or gravitational disturbances, e.g., Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (visible from Southern Hemisphere, companions to the Milky Way).
Formation: Begins with nebula (massive hydrogen gas cloud) → gravity causes localised clumps → first stars form → galaxy assembles around dark matter "scaffolding."
Milky Way: Spiral galaxy. Diameter ~100,000 light-years. Contains ~200–400 billion stars. Earth is ~26,000 light-years from centre, in the Orion Arm (a minor spiral arm).
Andromeda (M31): Nearest major galaxy to Milky Way. ~2.537 million light-years away. Also a spiral galaxy, slightly larger than Milky Way. Milky Way and Andromeda are on a collision course — will merge in ~4.5 billion years.
Main sequence (stable phase): Hydrogen fuses to helium in core (like our Sun now). Lasts billions of years.
End stage (depends on mass):
• Small/medium star (like Sun): Red Giant → Planetary nebula → White dwarf
• Massive star (8× Sun): Red supergiant → Supernova explosion → Neutron star or Black hole
Supernovae significance: Explosions forge heavy elements (iron, gold, uranium) and scatter them — the heavy atoms in your body came from ancient supernovae!
Exoplanet: Any planet outside our Solar System. Over 5,500 confirmed exoplanets (as of 2024). Most orbit other stars. Rogue planets (free-floating exoplanets) are not bound to any star.
JWST contribution: JWST is analysing exoplanet atmospheres for biosignatures (signs of life — water vapour, methane, CO₂).
Universe Composition — the 5-27-68 Rule. Everything we can see, touch, measure, or detect — stars, planets, gas, dust, you — is only 5% of the universe. The remaining 95% is invisible: 27% Dark Matter + 68% Dark Energy. The entire Standard Model of Physics (with all 17 particles) describes only 5% of what exists. This is why understanding dark matter and dark energy is the #1 priority in modern cosmology.
Key fact: Normal matter was created in the first 3 minutes (Big Bang nucleosynthesis) and in stellar interiors.
Gravitational lensing: Light from distant galaxies bends more than visible matter can explain — the excess bending reveals hidden mass (dark matter) along the line of sight.
Bullet Cluster (2006): Two galaxy clusters collided. Gas (visible matter) slowed down and collided. But the gravitational mass (dark matter halos) passed straight through — separating dark matter from normal matter. Most direct observational evidence for dark matter.
JWST (2024-25): Observed elongated young galaxies whose shapes align with "warm dark matter" or "wave dark matter" models — challenging the standard "cold dark matter" model.
Einstein's cosmological constant (Λ): Einstein added Λ to his GR equations to make a static universe, then removed it ("biggest blunder"). Dark energy may be exactly this constant — an intrinsic energy of empty space.
DESI (Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument), 2024: Measured distances to 6 million galaxies using light from up to 11 billion years ago. Most detailed 3D universe map yet. Findings suggest dark energy may NOT be constant — it may have changed over cosmic time. If confirmed, would require revising the Standard Model of cosmology (ΛCDM).
Black Hole Structure. Central black region = the black hole itself (invisible — no light escapes). Singularity: infinitely dense point at the centre where spacetime curvature becomes infinite and known physics breaks down. Event Horizon: the boundary around the singularity where escape velocity equals the speed of light — nothing can escape once crossed. Accretion Disc: superheated gas and matter spiralling into the black hole, glowing brighter than entire galaxies. First photographed: M87* (EHT, 2019) and Sgr A* (Milky Way's central black hole, EHT, 2022).
| Telescope / Mission | Country/Agency | Type | Key Contribution to Universe Science |
|---|---|---|---|
| JWST (James Webb Space Telescope) | NASA + ESA + CSA | Infrared, L2 orbit | Earliest galaxies, exoplanet atmospheres, dark stars, dead galaxy (700 Myr after BB) |
| Hubble Space Telescope | NASA + ESA (1990–) | UV + Visible + Near-IR | Discovered accelerating expansion (dark energy), age of universe, deep field images. One-gyro mode since June 2024. |
| DESI (Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument) | USA (2019–) | Ground-based spectrograph | 6M galaxy survey; most detailed 3D map; dark energy may be time-varying (2024) |
| Euclid | ESA (launched 2023) | Space, visible + near-IR | 3D mapping of 1/3 of sky for dark matter and dark energy signatures |
| AstroSat | ISRO, India (2015–) | Multi-wavelength (UV, X-ray) | Black holes, neutron stars, CMB, UV sky survey — India's space astronomy flagship |
| EHT (Event Horizon Telescope) | Global collaboration | Radio telescope network | First black hole image: M87* (2019), Sgr A* Milky Way centre (2022) |
| LIGO / Virgo | USA / Europe (2016–) | Gravitational wave detectors | Black hole mergers, neutron star mergers — Nobel 2017. India: LIGO-India (Hingoli, Maharashtra) — under construction, operational target ~2030 |
- a) Observation and understanding of the Universe ✓
- b) Study of the solar and the lunar eclipses
- c) Placing satellites in the orbit of the Earth
- d) Origin and evolution of living organisms on the Earth
Singularity: A point of infinite density and zero volume predicted by Einstein's General Relativity at the centre of black holes AND at the moment of the Big Bang. At singularities, known physics breaks down — understanding singularities requires a theory of quantum gravity (Theory of Everything).
String Theory: A theoretical framework that proposes fundamental particles are not point-like but tiny vibrating strings of energy. Aims to unify quantum mechanics and general relativity — potentially explaining gravity, dark matter, and black holes. Multiple extra dimensions predicted. Not yet experimentally confirmed.
Standard Model: The established theory of particle physics — describes 17 fundamental particles and 3 of 4 fundamental forces (excludes gravity). Related to understanding the universe's composition (quarks, leptons, bosons) but incomplete (doesn't explain dark matter, dark energy, or gravity). All these terms belong to the domain of theoretical physics and cosmology → context: observation and understanding of the Universe.
- (a) The CMB is radiation emitted by the most distant stars we can observe and its uniform temperature proves that all stars formed at the same time from the Big Bang
- (b) The CMB is the afterglow of the Big Bang itself — thermal radiation released about 380,000 years after the Big Bang when the universe cooled enough for atoms to form and became transparent to light; its existence, temperature (~2.725 K), and near-uniformity across the sky were all precisely predicted by the Big Bang theory before being detected
- (c) The CMB was produced by the collision of dark matter particles in the early universe and its detection proves that dark matter must have existed from the very beginning of the universe
- (d) The CMB is the electromagnetic radiation emitted by the cosmic web — the large-scale filamentary structure of galaxy clusters and superclusters — and its uniform distribution proves that galaxies formed simultaneously across the universe
1. Dark matter does not emit, absorb, or reflect light, making it undetectable by any telescope.
2. Dark matter constitutes approximately 27% of the total content of the universe.
3. The existence of dark matter was indirectly confirmed through its gravitational effects on visible matter, including galaxy rotation curves and gravitational lensing.
4. The Bullet Cluster observation in 2006 provided direct evidence for dark matter by showing that the gravitational mass of colliding galaxy clusters was spatially separated from the visible (baryonic) matter.
- (a) 1 and 3 only
- (b) 2, 3 and 4 only
- (c) 2, 3 and 4 only — Statement 1 is partially wrong
- (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4 — All are correct
- (a) DESI confirmed that dark energy is entirely absent from the universe — the accelerating expansion is actually caused by modified gravity rather than any energy field
- (b) DESI found that dark energy constitutes exactly 68% of the universe's content, precisely confirming the Standard Cosmological Model (ΛCDM) with no revisions needed
- (c) DESI's measurements suggest that dark energy may NOT be constant over time — it could have changed in strength across cosmic history, which if confirmed would challenge the ΛCDM standard model of cosmology and require new theoretical frameworks
- (d) DESI discovered the identity of dark energy particles — confirming they are "quintessence fields" made of ultralight scalar particles that explain the cosmological constant precisely
- (a) A singularity is a region of space where gravity is completely absent — it is the point at the very centre of every black hole where all matter is destroyed and where the Big Bang originated from nothingness
- (b) A singularity refers to a unique species of elementary particle predicted by string theory that existed only at the moment of the Big Bang and inside black holes, giving them their extreme properties
- (c) A singularity is an observational artefact — a point where telescopes lose resolution and appear to show infinite density, but in reality no actual singularity exists in black holes or at the Big Bang
- (d) A singularity is a point of infinite density and zero volume predicted by Einstein's General Relativity at the centre of black holes and at t=0 of the Big Bang — at these points known physical laws break down completely, indicating the need for a yet-undiscovered theory of quantum gravity that can reconcile General Relativity with quantum mechanics
| Topic | Key Facts |
|---|---|
| Age & Origin | Universe age: 13.787 billion years. Big Bang Theory: universe started as infinitely hot, dense singularity → expanded. Expansion of space itself (not explosion in pre-existing space). Stages: Singularity → Inflation (10⁻³² s) → Nucleosynthesis (3 min, H+He formed) → CMB released (380,000 yrs, universe becomes transparent) → First stars (200-500 Myr) → Solar System (4.6 Bya). |
| Evidence for Big Bang | CMB (Cosmic Microwave Background, 2.725 K, discovered 1965, Nobel 1978). Hubble's Law (expanding universe, V=H₀×d). Abundance of H (75%) and He (25%) matching nucleosynthesis predictions. Distant galaxy redshifts. |
| Galaxies | Types: Spiral (Milky Way, Andromeda), Elliptical, Irregular (Magellanic Clouds). Milky Way: spiral, 100,000 light-years diameter, 200-400 billion stars, Earth ~26,000 ly from centre. Andromeda (M31): nearest major galaxy, 2.537 Mly away. Galaxies form from nebulae around dark matter scaffolding. |
| Star Life Cycle | Nebula → Star. Small stars → Red Giant → Planetary Nebula → White Dwarf. Massive stars → Supernova → Neutron Star or Black Hole. Heavy elements (C, O, Fe, Au, U) forged in stars and scattered by supernovae — we are made of stardust. |
| Composition | Normal matter: 5% (atoms, Standard Model particles). Dark matter: 27% (invisible, gravitational effects only). Dark energy: 68% (drives accelerating expansion, unknown nature). Standard Model explains only 5% of the universe. |
| Dark Matter | No light emission/absorption/reflection. Detected via: galaxy rotation curves (Vera Rubin), gravitational lensing, Bullet Cluster (2006, most direct evidence — dark matter separated from normal matter in collision). Candidate particles: WIMPs, axions, sterile neutrinos. 27% of universe. Forms "halos" around galaxies. |
| Dark Energy | 68% of universe. Causes accelerating expansion (discovered 1998, Nobel 2011: Perlmutter, Schmidt, Riess). May be Einstein's cosmological constant (Λ). DESI 2024: 6M galaxy survey; dark energy may be time-varying (not constant) — challenges ΛCDM model. |
| Black Holes | Extreme mass concentration. Event Horizon: no-return boundary. Singularity: infinite density centre (physics breaks down). EHT: M87* photographed (2019), Sgr A* (Milky Way centre, 2022). Types: Stellar, Supermassive (Sgr A* = 4M solar masses), Intermediate, Primordial. Hawking radiation: predicted slow evaporation (undetected). |
| UPSC 2017 Terms | Event Horizon + Singularity + String Theory + Standard Model → Context: "Observation and understanding of the Universe" → Answer: (a). |
| Current Affairs 2024-25 | DESI 3D map (2024): 6M galaxies, dark energy may vary over time. JWST: Dark stars (2025, powered by dark matter?). JWST: Dead galaxy 700M years after BB. JWST: Elongated early galaxies challenge cold dark matter. EHT: Sgr A* (2022). AstroSat (India, 2015): multi-wavelength, black holes, neutron stars. LIGO-India (Hingoli, ~2030). Euclid (ESA, 2023): dark matter mapping. |
Trap 1 — "The Big Bang was an explosion in pre-existing space" → WRONG! The Big Bang was the expansion of space itself — not an explosion of matter into pre-existing empty space. Before the Big Bang, there was no "space," "time," or "location" to explode into. Space, time, matter, and energy all began with the Big Bang simultaneously. There is no "centre" of the Big Bang explosion — from any galaxy's perspective, all other galaxies appear to be moving away (as all points on an inflating balloon move away from each other). This is why the question "what was there before the Big Bang?" is physically meaningless — "before" implies time, which didn't exist before the Big Bang.
Trap 2 — "Dark matter comprises 68% and Dark energy 27% of the universe" → WRONG! (Numbers switched) The correct proportions are: Dark energy = 68%, Dark matter = 27%, Normal matter = 5%. This is the most common factual mix-up on this topic. Memory trick: Dark Energy is the LARGEST component (68%), Dark matter is the SECOND (27%), visible matter is tiny (5%). Think: E > M > V (Energy > Matter > Visible). The "5-27-68 rule" — visible matter is only 5%, dark matter is 27%, dark energy is 68%.
Trap 3 — "Event Horizon is the singularity at the centre of a black hole" → WRONG! Event horizon and singularity are two different things at two different locations. The event horizon is the outer boundary of a black hole — the surface of no return, where escape velocity = speed of light. You can be at or near the event horizon without experiencing infinite density. The singularity is the point of infinite density inside the black hole — at its very centre. An observer falling through the event horizon would not immediately die (tidal forces become extreme gradually) but the singularity inside is where physics breaks down completely. UPSC 2017 directly tested knowledge of both terms.
Trap 4 — "Andromeda is the nearest galaxy to the Milky Way" → WRONG (misleading)! Andromeda (M31) is the nearest major galaxy — at 2.537 million light-years. But the nearest galaxy overall is the Canis Major Dwarf galaxy (~25,000 light-years from Earth, embedded in the Milky Way's disc) or the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal galaxy (~70,000 light-years). The document's own language says "nearest major galaxy" — the qualifier "major" is important. UPSC questions test this distinction.
Trap 5 — "The universe is expanding because of the Big Bang's initial explosion energy" → WRONG! While the initial Big Bang set matter in motion, the current accelerating expansion is driven by dark energy — not residual Big Bang momentum. If only Big Bang energy were responsible, the expansion would be gradually slowing down due to gravity (like a ball thrown upward). Instead, observations show expansion is speeding up. This acceleration requires an additional repulsive energy — dark energy (or cosmological constant Λ). This was the Nobel-winning discovery of 1998 (Perlmutter, Schmidt, Riess). Dark energy actively pushes the universe apart — it does not just "let it coast."


