This sounds like a deep dive into the and the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) . Since the first 500,000 years set the stage for everything we see today, a great feature would focus on how we use that ancient light to "weigh" the universe. Title Idea: The Universe’s First Snapshot
How 380,000 years of chaos became the blueprint for the cosmos. The Core Narrative Precision cosmology : the first half million years
Start with the moment of "last scattering." Before 380,000 years, the universe was a hot, opaque plasma soup. Then, it cooled enough for atoms to form, the fog lifted, and light finally escaped. This is the CMB —the oldest "picture" we have. This sounds like a deep dive into the
Based on this era, we know the universe is roughly 68% Dark Energy, 27% Dark Matter, and only 5% "stuff" (atoms, stars, us). The Core Narrative Start with the moment of
The CMB is a uniform 2.725 Kelvin , but the tiny fluctuations (one part in 100,000) are what grew into galaxies. Visual Hook
Contrast the "guesswork" of 20th-century astronomy with modern missions like Planck . We’ve moved from "the universe is roughly 10–20 billion years old" to "it is exactly 13.787 ± 0.020 billion years old." Key "Stats" to Highlight