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NASA's upcoming telescope launch aims to address some existential questions

Concept art for the telescope named SPHEREx Spectro-Photometer. The telescope is depicted as three white nesting cones with hardware attached at the bottom. The earth is seen below
Concept art for the SPHEREx Spectro-Photometer.
(
NASA/JPL-Caltech
)

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Sometimes, space missions aim to answer the simple, quotidian questions we ask ourselves as we go about our lives:

"How did the universe begin?

"How did galaxies start to develop?"

"Well, how did I get here?"

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This week's planned launch of NASA's SPHEREx telescope seeks to provide insights into some of these existential questions.

Three things to know:

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How does one explore the origins of the universe?

Simply put: The Big Bang led to an astronomical expansion in the size of our universe in a very brief period. This rapid cosmic growth has significantly influenced the formation of our universe.

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But astronomers still don't know what triggered that expansion, or why it occurred so extensively. The hope with SPHEREx is that scientists will be able to map out a clearer, broader picture of how our universe began.

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