By peering into the distance with the biggest and best telescopes in the  world, astronomers have managed to glimpse exploding stars, galaxies and other glowing cosmic beacons as they appeared just hundreds of millions of years after the big bang.  They are so far away that their light is only now reaching Earth, even  though it was emitted more than 13 billion years ago.
 Astronomers have been able to identify those objects in the early universe because their bright glow has remained visible even after a long, universe-spanning journey. But spotting the raw  materials from which the first cosmic structures formed—the gas produced  as the infant universe expanded and cooled in the first few minutes  after the big bang—has not been possible. That material is not itself  luminous, and everywhere astronomers have looked they have found not the  primordial light-element gases hydrogen, helium and lithium from the  big bang but rather material polluted by heavier elements, which form only in stellar interiors and in cataclysms such as supernovae.
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