This idea is compelling because it taps into something real: the universe does have observable boundaries. As space expands, there are regions whose light will never reach us, and others whose light has only just arrived. It’s natural to wonder whether the CMB is simply that boundary—the farthest light that can still get through.
The key distinction is that the CMB behaves like a timestamp, not a distance marker. We see it in every direction not because it comes from the farthest galaxies, but because we’re looking back to the same moment everywhere: about 380,000 years after the universe began expanding, when matter cooled enough for light to travel freely for the first time.
What really rules out the “edge of an infinite universe” idea is the CMB’s extraordinary precision. Its radiation follows an almost perfect blackbody spectrum, meaning it was once in full thermal equilibrium. Random, redshifted light from countless distant galaxies could not accidentally reproduce that signature. This is not generic background glow—it’s a preserved thermal state.
Even more striking are the tiny temperature fluctuations etched into the CMB. These variations are minuscule but highly structured, matching predictions about pressure waves rippling through the early universe. Those same patterns later shaped where galaxies formed. A simple visibility limit gives you no reason to expect this kind of cosmic fingerprint.
So while the universe may still be spatially infinite—we genuinely don’t know—the CMB doesn’t mark the edge of such a space. Instead, it marks the boundary of observation in time: the earliest chapter of cosmic history that light allows us to read. It’s not where the universe ends. It’s where our vision of it begins.