This is a potentially interesting thread, inasmuch as it involves learning some of what is known about the
Intergalactic medium (The IGM is the title of the thread.)
A fair amount seems to be known. Temperature in the millions Kelvin. Not 2.7 kelvin! Not uniform static structure---but wispy cobweb dynamically collapsing structures. It's something that astrophysicists study. It is not the uniform evenly distributed thing all at the same equilibrium temp, that you might initially think. Because parts of the medium are falling into other parts, gravitational energy released by falling and collision is a major energy input to the IGM. I gather it does much more heating than, for example starlight.
With widely different temperatures in the millions K, the Intergalactic Medium is not a good candidate to be the origin of the CMB. To put it mildly
I have to stress not being expert in this. I don't know whom in our immediate PF community we could call on---maybe Chroot knows.
Ignition's initial idea that the CMB could be radiation from the IGM is not the issue. What's interesting is the general nature of the IGM. We should pool what we know, and hope someone with more to say will show up.
For starters, even though WikiP is not a guaranteed authoritative source, I'll give the Wikilink. It's often useful:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intergalactic_medium
===quote Wiki==
Intergalactic space is the physical space between galaxies. Generally free of dust and debris, intergalactic space is very close to a total vacuum. Some theories put the average density of the Universe as the equivalent of one hydrogen atom per cubic meter.[1][2] The density of the Universe, however, is clearly not uniform; it ranges from relatively high density in galaxies (including very high density in structures within galaxies, such as planets, stars, and black holes) to conditions in vast voids that have much lower density than the Universe's average.
Surrounding and stretching between galaxies, there is a rarefied plasma[3][4] that is thought to possesses a cosmic filamentary structure[5] and that is slightly denser than the average density in the Universe. This material is called the intergalactic medium (IGM) and is mostly ionized hydrogen, i.e. a plasma consisting of equal numbers of electrons and protons. The IGM is thought to exist at a density of 10 to 100 times the average density of the Universe (10 to 100 hydrogen atoms per cubic meter). It reaches densities as high as 1000 times the average density of the Universe in rich clusters of galaxies.
The reason the IGM is thought to be mostly ionized gas is that its temperature is thought to be quite high by terrestrial standards (though some parts of it are only "warm" by astrophysical standards). As gas falls into the Intergalactic Medium from the voids, it heats up to temperatures of 10
5 K to 10
7 K, which is high enough for the bound electrons to escape from the hydrogen nuclei upon collisions. At these temperatures, it is called the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM). Computer simulations indicate that on the order of half the atomic matter in the universe might exist in this warm-hot, rarefied state. When gas falls from the filamentary structures of the WHIM into the galaxy clusters at the intersections of the cosmic filaments, it can heat up even more, reaching temperatures of 10
8 K and above.
==endquote==
Paraphrasing Wikipedia, for the moment, in lack of any better source:
The reason you can't just point a bolometer (a radiation thermometer) at the sky and get readings on order of a million kelvin (widely differing in different patches of sky) is that the IGM is so rarified. The IGM radiation must be negligible compared with the CMB---the light coming to us from the hot (3000 K) matter in the early universe.
So for practical purposes the actual temperature of the sky is the CMB temperature, that classic blackbody curve that you get from a 3000 K blackbody shifted by stretching wavelengths about 1100-fold, so it becomes 2.7 K blackbody.
The 3000 K matter in the early universe has the properties of equilibrium and uniformity that we need to explain the uniformity of the observed CMB, whereas the IGM matter does not have the required properties. It is all uneven and wispy and patchy and the wrong temperature.