Siarad - Yes indeed.<br /><br />Here is some detail from the following article on the IGM, intergalactic medium, and one source of evidence, namely the lyman-alpha forest absorption lines in quasar spectral analysis, which is now very precise.<br /><br />Scientific American, 10/02, article The<br />Emptiest Places Space By Evan Scannapieco,<br />Patrick Petitjean<br />and Tom Broadhurst<br /><br />Here is an excerpt from pages 58,59.<br /><br />The exerpt concerns evidence about the nature of the IGM, the intergalactic medium. As shown below, the evidence proves the IGM is highly ionized or magnetized, and, in fact, means that magnetism played an important role in structure formation in the early universe - a fact usually ignored. <br /><br />In fact, the hundreds of intergalactic clouds causing the lyman-alpha forest in quasar spectra are all no more than one part in one million neutral hydrogen, they are mostly ionized hydrogen; etc.<br /><br />More on thread theme, note the increase in sensitivity of spectral analysis allowing this detailed study of varying red shifts of hydrogen absorption lines in quasar spectra, as well as other element absorption lines.<br /><br />See Sciam.com for the article for additional detail and diagrams.:<br /><br />"The second type of evidence involves quasars. Thought to be powered by young supermassive black holes, these extremely bright objects act as lighthouses that illuminate narrow stretches<br />of intergalactic space. Material between us and a quasar ab-sorbs<br />light of specific wavelengths, leaving a telltale imprint on<br />the quasar spectrum. Interpreting such spectra requires a de-gree<br />of care. They contain lines at wavelengths that do not ap-pear<br />to correspond to any known substance. This discrepancy<br />is thought to be a product of the expansion of the universe,<br />which, by stretching the light waves, causes the spectral lines to<br />move from their usual positions to longer wavelengths?a pro-cess known as redshifting. The