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Space

Clearest view yet of the universe's troubled youth

By Stephen Battersby

22 March 2006

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Then and now

(Image: NASA)

DURING the first split second of existence, an extraordinary force stretched the universe from a cramped sub-microscopic speck into the forerunner of the spacious cosmos we now inhabit. Or at least that’s what cosmologists would have us believe. This theory, known as inflation, can explain a number of puzzling features about the cosmos, such as the fact that one side of the universe looks much the same as the other. Yet despite the enthusiasm, experimental backing for the idea has been thin on the ground.

Last week, however, cosmologists unveiled powerful new support for the…

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