What happened in the first tiny fraction of a second after the Big Bang? This is one of the biggest questions in modern science. During that time, the universe expanded incredibly fast in an event called cosmic inflation . Scientists believe this rapid expansion created tiny ripples in space that later grew into galaxies, stars, and planets. Now, a new study by Khan and his team suggests that these tiny ripples may have left behind two important clues that still exist today. One is a special type of dark matter , and the other is a unique background of gravitational waves . The exciting part is that both of these signals may have come from the same event during inflation . If future experiments detect them, scientists could learn more about how the universe looked just after the Big Bang. The Universe Still Has Hidden Secrets Scientists have learned a lot about the early universe by studying the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) . This ancient light was released about 380,000 years af...