Faint radio signals suggest early universe was heated, not cold, before it 'lit up'

Sadie Harley
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

Astronomers hunting for evidence of the light from the first stars and galaxies have found that the universe was warm, rather than cold, before it "lit up."
A Curtin University-led team from the International Center of Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) was searching for the elusive "Epoch of Reionization," using the Murchison Widefield Array telescope (MWA) located at Inyarrimanha Ilgari Bundara, the CSIRO Murchison Radio-Astronomy Observatory on Wajarri Yamaji Country in Western Australia.
"Our research was conducted over two phases. During the initial research, we obtained our first evidence of gas heating up between galaxies nearly 800 million years after the Big Bang," said ICRAR first phase lead author, Dr. Ridhima Nunhokee.
The Epoch of Reionization is a period early in the universe's history that is predicted by theory but is yet to be detected using radio telescopes. It signifies the end of the Cosmic Dark Ages, roughly a billion years after the Big Bang, when the gas between galaxies shifted from opaque to transparent, allowing light from the first stars and galaxies to travel throughout the universe.
Dr. Nunhokee explained that to study this early period of the universe, astronomers must isolate the faint signal from the Epoch of Reionization, identify and remove every other source of radio waves in the universe from their observations.
"These include emissions from nearby stars and galaxies, interference from Earth's atmosphere, and even noise generated by telescope itself. Only after carefully subtracting these 'foreground signals' will the remaining data reveal signals from the Epoch of Reionization," Dr. Nunhokee said.
"From this research, we have developed methods to deal with the foreground contamination, and subtract the signals we don't want, but also better understand our telescope and come up with a clean signal.
"We've also been able to integrate about ten years of MWA data together, to observe the sky for longer than we ever have before. That's the other reason we've come closer than ever to detecting the signal."
The quality and quantity of this new dataset are what made this discovery possible, according to the team. A cold universe would have produced a signal that would have been visible due to the MWA's extensive capabilities. The lack of that signal rules out such a 'cold start' to reionization and means the universe must have been "pre-heated" before reionization happened.
Professor Cathryn Trott, who leads the Epoch of Reionization project at ICRAR, was the lead author of the second phase of the research.
"As the universe evolved, the gas between galaxies expands and cools, so we would expect it to be very, very cold," says Professor Trott.
"Our measurements show that it is at least heated by a certain amount. Not by a lot, but it tells us that very cold reionization is ruled out. That's really interesting.
"The research suggests this heating is likely driven by the energy from early sources of X-rays from early black holes and stellar remnants spreading through the universe."
The lessons learned from processing these data will jump-start the search for the Epoch of Reionization with the SKA telescopes, currently under construction in Wajarri Country in Western Australia and the Northern Cape of South Africa.
"All these existing techniques will help us find what's missing," said Dr. Nunhokee.
"The signal is definitely buried in there. It's just improving on our data, and getting more data, cleaner data, to reach it."
The initial paper, "Limits on the 21cm power spectrum from MWA observations" and the second phase paper, "Improved limits with the MWA using Gaussian information," are published in The Astrophysical Journal.
More information: C. D. Nunhokee et al, Limits on the 21 cm Power Spectrum at z = 6.5–7.0 from Murchison Widefield Array Observations, The Astrophysical Journal (2025).
Improved limits with the MWA using Gaussian information, The Astrophysical Journal (2025).
Journal information: Astrophysical Journal