Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB): After the Big Bang, the Universe was full of high-energy photons. Until about 400,000 years after the Big Bang, these photons interacted strongly with electrons throughout the Universe. But after that time, those electrons combined with protons to form hydrogen atoms. After that, the photons could not interact with matter, and they traveled in straight lines until the present day. During that period, they redshifted so much that they appear as microwaves. The CMB was emitted when the universe had cooled enough to form neutral hydrogen; before this time, the universe was opaque.
Pages: Big Bang, Epoch of Reionization, Other Telescopes