In the beginning
How many stars can you see in the night sky? In a city, you probably cannot see very many. But on a clear night, far from city lights, you can see hundreds, perhaps several thousand. With a telescope, you can see many thousands. With a really good telescope, scientists can see hundreds of millions.
But look closer: as well as stars, there are galaxies out there. What is a galaxy? It is a group of stars – millions, billions, or even hundreds of billions, all in the same part of space.
If you try to count all these stars and galaxies, you reach an impossible number. The scientist Carl Sagan said, ‘The total number of stars in the universe is larger than all the grains of sand on all the beaches of the planet Earth.’
So where did all these stars and galaxies come from? How were they made? Today, space is very big – enormously big – but scientists say that between 12 and 14 billion years ago, space was really small, impossibly small. Everything in the universe was pushed together in a space smaller than a full stop.
Then there was a BIG BANG and everything in the universe began to move away from the explosion at enormous speed. (This idea about the beginning of the universe is often called the Big Bang.) There were clouds of hot gas – hydrogen and helium. As they flew through space, over millions of years, these gases began to move around in spirals, like water going out of a bath. Many pictures of galaxies have this spiral shape.
Inside the big spirals of each galaxy there were millions of smaller spirals, which formed into huge burning balls, and each burning ball was a star. And all these galaxies are still moving away from each other at enormous speed, so space is getting bigger and bigger all the time.
So how big is space? Well, it is much bigger than we can easily understand. But, amazingly, we can use our eyes to see how big it is.
Look at the group of stars called Orion. On a clear night, you can see these easily without a telescope. The star at the top left is a red star called Betelgeuse. The star at the bottom