So if the universe had a beginning in time and space, and we were far enough from that place, and if we had a powerful enough telescope we could actually see the beginning of the universe. That's a lot of if's but I find it more fascinating than jets and bullets.
It's not an if that the universe had a beginning. The universe expanded out of one point. We can call that a beginning.
We can not see back to the beginning of the universe because telescopes use photons. And in the early universe electrons were not bound because energies were too high. This means the universe was opaque. Photons would collide with with electrons.
But at some point the universe expanded enough so it was cool enough for atoms to form. At that point photons were able to move through the universe freely. The universe became transparent.
This is the cosmic microwave background.
So if we look away as far as we can what we see what is called the surface of last scattering. It is the surface of the opaque universe. If we look further away we see no photons because they could not move freely.
Because this happened 400,000 years after the big bang, that's as far as we can see.
In theory you could see farther if you use gravitational waves. But none have been observed. Or maybe neutrino telescopes. But neutrino's were extremely hard to even detect. Neutrino telescopes have been build. But it's extremely impractical. Neutrino telescopes are being used. But observing objects so very far away, donno about that.
We can calculate which light has had time to reach us and if we do we get a diameter of 93 billion light years of the observable universe. But the surface of light scattering reduces it to 78 billion light years.
The most distant observed galaxy is IOK-1 and the distance is 12.8 billion light years. So that's a diameter of 25.6 billion light years for the area in which we can see galaxies.
It's a coincidence that the distance we can see is almost equal to the age of light years of the universe. This IOK-1 galaxy appears as it was 750 million years after the big bang. Not as it was just after the big bang. It took at least 150 million years for the first galaxies to form. We should be able to see the pre-galaxy universe someday between 400,000 and 150 million years old. But not quite yet. And that gets really close to 45 billion light years away.