"Sometimes I'm looking at the gutter and sometimes the stars. But
when we (the collective we) do look at the sky, what we see is
tremendous. The cosmic background radiation is one of those
remarkable discoveries that will mark the century. The last
century, that is. ... The cosmic background radiation dies in fact fill
the sky and on average appears to be completely thermal: that is,
it can be completely characterized by the temperature alone. The
cosmic background radiation looks exactly like a hot bath of light left
over from the big bang. Only it's not so hot anymore, just a few
degrees [about 2.7 degrees Centrigrade - a63] above absolute zero.
After the COBE [Cosmic Background Explorer] satellite a generation of
cosmologists became slaves to the cosmic background radiation.
Superb experiments are built to perform measurements of all kinds. ...
According to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, quantum particles
and fields cannot be perfectly still. A consequence is that there
will always be quantum fluctuations where the local quantum energy will
be slightly higher or slightly lower than average. ... The overall
effect is a patterning of the cosmic background radiation with minute
hot and cold spots. ...
This arehaeological remnant of the big bang has journeyed from the
farthest reaches of the cosmos that we can access and carries
information about these earliest times, and so encodes all kinds of
information about the large-scale landscape of the universe. In
particular, we should be able to see an imprint of the geometry of
space in the pattern of hot and cold spots in the sky.
We can see how the universe got its spots."
- Janna Levin, How the Universe Got Its Spots

Here's another image of the Cosmic Microwave Background. I just think it's incredibly neat. This image was produced a couple of years ago, after Janna Levin's book was published; it is from one of the "superb experiments" she mentioned in this passage, written in January 2000.