The universe shines with the light of some billion trillion stars. A team of astrophysicists recently used a satellite to sum up all these stars’ light, measured in particles called photons. Let there be numbers: By their estimate, over the history of the universe, stars have emitted 4 times 10-to-the-84th-power photons into the visible universe (that’s a 4 followed by 84 zeros).
But their work was more than counting sunbeams. The technique allowed astrophysicists to construct a history of star formation: Star births peaked about 3 billion years after the big bang, as members of the international Fermi-LAT Collaboration reported Thursday in the journal Science. This spurt has slowed dramatically in the 10-plus billion years since.
Marco Ajello, an astrophysicist at Clemson University in South Carolina, and a large team of scientists working with the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope measured what’s known as extragalactic background light. “This is basically the entire emission from all the stars in the universe,” Ajello said.
Extragalactic background light is “very precious for cosmologists,” said Elisa Prandini, an astrophysicist at the University of Padova in Italy, who was not involved with this research. “It encodes the stars’ formation history from the end of the ‘cosmic Dark Ages,’ hundreds million years after the big bang, up to present day.”