IF YOU LOOK UP ON A CLEAR NIGHT,
you’ll likely see a few bright celestial
objects—and a lot of dark space between
them. But if there are hundreds of billions of
stars in our galaxy and hundreds of billions
of galaxies in the universe, the whole thing
should light up like Times Square. So why is
the cosmos pitch-black at night?
It isn’t. We just can’t see most of these inter-
stellar billboards. Space is full of light energy
on a spectrum from high-energy gamma rays
to low-energy radio waves, says Mark Ham-
mergren, an astronomer at Chicago’s Adler
Planetarium. Our eyes can see only a small
portion of that gamut, which scientists have
aptly dubbed “visible light.” Ultrashort gamma
waves can’t penetrate Earth’s atmosphere, for
example, and our retinas simply can’t register
the super-low-energy infrared waves.
When there’s nothing for our peepers to
pick up on, we see that absence of light as
an absence of color too. Coupled with other
astronomical realities—the enormity of the
universe and the fact that as it expands, stars
race away from us—space can seem pretty
empty. In reality, what looks like a blank back-
ground is a tapestry of distant constellations,
each one shining bright.
EYE ON THE SKY
by Alex Schwartz
ANSWER KEY
HEAD TRIP
[1] The Himalayas
[2] Grand Canyon
[3] Nile River
Delta and
Suez Canal
[4] Australian
coast and
the Great
Barrier Reef
[5] Niagara Falls
[6] Sahara
Desert
why
is space
black?
THEN CHECK OUT OUR PODCASTS!
LOVE?
A hilarious game show to
catch up on tech news
The bizarre past and present
of all things science
Listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts
Mondays Wednesdays