Half a year after first opening its eyes to the cosmos, NASA‘s SPHEREx spacecraft has unveiled its first complete, all-sky mosaic of the universe.

The first of at least four such maps anticipated from SPHEREx, the new composite of more than 100 individual exposures promises to reveal unprecedented details of the night sky.

“It’s incredible how much information SPHEREx has collected in just six months — information that will be especially valuable when used alongside our other missions’ data to better understand our universe,” Shawn Domagal-Goldman, the acting director of the Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington, said in a statement.

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“I think every astronomer is going to find something of value here,” he added, “as NASA’s missions enable the world to answer fundamental questions about how the universe got its start, and how it changed to eventually create a home for us in it.”

Launched on March 12, 2025, SPHEREx took less than a month to open its eyes on the universe. Its debut image, containing more than 100,000 galaxies and stars, signaled to scientists that the spacecraft was performing as designed.

Over its planned two-year mission, the $488 million telescope will scan the entire night sky every six months and collect data from more than 450 million galaxies. To accomplish that, SPHEREx will capture roughly 3,600 images per day, according to NASA, with each full-sky pass layered atop the last to reveal ever fainter cosmic details.

“That’s an amazing amount of information to gather in a short amount of time,” Beth Fabinsky, the deputy project manager for SPHEREx, said in the statement. “I think this makes us the mantis shrimp of telescopes, because we have an amazing multicolor visual detection system and we can also see a very wide swath of our surroundings.”

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Horizontal dark blue to black oval with a bright white light/dot with faded edges in the middle of the oval. A stream of yellow and white light is emitted to each side of the center light with faint specs of light scattered throughout the oval.

This edited SPHEREx image shows only the infrared light emitted by stars and galaxies. The telescope observes hundreds of millions of deep sky objects every six months. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

One of SPHEREx’s central science goals is to study cosmic inflation, a theorized burst of rapid expansion of the universe that occurred in the first fraction of a second after the Big Bang. During that fleeting moment 14 billion years ago, space itself ballooned outward, smoothing the early universe and leaving behind subtle patterns, or ripples, that still influence how galaxies are distributed today.

By mapping the universe in three dimensions on such an enormous scale, SPHEREx is expected to record the statistical distribution of these inflationary ripples, which could help scientists narrow down the elusive physics that powered the universe’s early growth.

The observatory will also act as a cosmic scout within the Milky Way, surveying vast clouds of gas and dust for interstellar dust grains coated with frozen water, carbon dioxide and other icy compounds that may have helped seed planets, and potentially life.

Hubble Space Telescope and two planned space observatories, China‘s Xuntian telescope and the European Space Agency‘s ARRAKIHS mission — would be negatively affected.

Because each SPHEREx image covers a patch of sky roughly 200 times larger than the full moon, nearly every image it captures could contain at least one streak from a passing spacecraft, the analysis, published in early December in the journal Nature, found.

With today’s satellite population of about 15,000 expected to swell to 1 million by the end of the 2030s, astronomers warn the damage could be irreversible, as once a faint cosmic signal is obscured, the lost scientific information cannot be fully recovered.