Image Title: Evolution of Galaxies Left-center: Hubble peers through a cone of galaxies that extend off to the upper-right corner where a bright light represents the Big Bang. Near Hubble the galaxies appear as we see them today. As we move further through the cone, the galaxies become more misshapen, diffuse, and redder.

A Core Sample of the Universe

Light from far-distant objects must cross unimaginably vast expanses of space over millions to billions of years to reach us. This means the farthest objects we can see look to us like they appeared in the early universe, when their light began traveling.

Credits: NASA