How Will the Universe End? Exploring Theories and Predictions

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In summary: There is a lot of speculation on what will happen when we die, but it's mostly just ideas.In summary, an article in a magazine suggests that the universe will end and future civilizations won't be able to figure out the big bang without a history in astronomy. Future observers will likely see the universe as static, with no evidence of the expanding universe. However, this is just speculation and there is no evidence that this will happen.

How do you think the universe will end

  • It will keep expanding

    Votes: 12 42.9%
  • Universe reverses expansion and crunches

    Votes: 5 17.9%
  • Big rip in the fabric of spacetime

    Votes: 2 7.1%
  • other

    Votes: 9 32.1%

  • Total voters
    28
  • #1
brother time
45
0
Just curious about how people think the universe will end.
 
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  • #2
Not sure why you need or want a poll for this. This is a question that can be objectively answered my looking at observational data. Current data favours a scenario where the universe continues to expand forever, although the possibility of a big crunch type end is not ruled out.
 
  • #3
I read an article in a back issue of skynews that said that an American astronomer thought that the galaxies would get so distant that they would be red-shifted beyond the visible spectrum. This process would completely make it impossible for future civilizations to theorize the big bang without a history in astronomy. The good news is that this process would take 3 trillion years. And I was just curious Nick.
cheers, BT
 
  • #4
brother time said:
I read an article in a back issue of skynews that said that an American astronomer thought that the galaxies would get so distant that they would be red-shifted beyond the visible spectrum. This process would completely make it impossible for future civilizations to theorize the big bang without a history in astronomy. The good news is that this process would take 3 trillion years. And I was just curious Nick.
cheers, BT

that's not anything new, and it falls under the heading of "keep expanding".

What you may have read about was an article by Larry Krauss, a top mainstream cosmologist (who also has written popular books). I'm a fan.

He follows the standard (LambdaCDM) model out into the far distant future as it "keeps expanding" with steady mild acceleration---no "big rip" is foreseen. LambdaCDM is a remarkably good fit to the data so increasingly is the only model anyone in the profession uses.

And he comes to the obvious conclusion that after a long while we won't be able to see any galaxies except our own. So if life evolves on some future planet and future astronomers evolve and look thru their telescopes they won't be able to see any other galaxies. So they won't be able to figure out that the U is expanding.

When you think about it, it's pretty obvious and straightforward. But a journalist could hype it up and make it seem radical, I guess.

In any case the actual article by Larry Krauss is excellent and you could go straight to it and get quite a bit out of it. I will get the link. Just google "krauss end cosmology" if you want.

This is the original article
http://arxiv.org/abs/0704.0221
The Return of a Static Universe and the End of Cosmology
Lawrence M. Krauss (1,2), Robert J. Scherrer (2) ((1) Case Western Reserve University, (2) Vanderbilt University)
(Submitted on 2 Apr 2007 (v1), last revised 27 Jun 2007 (this version, v3))
We demonstrate that as we extrapolate the current LambdaCDM universe forward in time, all evidence of the Hubble expansion will disappear, so that observers in our "island universe" will be fundamentally incapable of determining the true nature of the universe, including the existence of the highly dominant vacuum energy, the existence of the CMB, and the primordial origin of light elements. With these pillars of the modern Big Bang gone, this epoch will mark the end of cosmology and the return of a static universe. In this sense, the coordinate system appropriate for future observers will perhaps fittingly resemble the static coordinate system in which the de Sitter universe was first presented.
Comments: 5th prize 2007 Gravity Research Foundation Essay Competition.

It doesn't mean that the U actually becomes static or that cosmo ends. It just means that it becomes very hard for future people to DISCOVER that it is expanding. The actual expansion goes on and on at a slowly accelerating pace. But the future people can't tell so they think their own galaxy is the only thing in the universe. (Galaxies do not expand, so for them everything stays the same, or static.)

Krauss article was picked up the the Sci Am, and there is a popularized version that you can also find with google. Fun, but not a big deal.
 
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  • #5
it will expand forever and we will freeze to death
 
  • #6
brother time said:
Just curious about how people think the universe will end.

I put other, because in reality we do not know. The universe is presently expanding and will likely do so for its viable history as a universe. How does a universe actually end or just disappear in cold death if there is no reversal, we do not know.
 
  • #7
When you mean "end", do you mean for human kind? I think it will continue to exist even though we are gone.
 
  • #8
Have any of you heard of the big chill? The theory is that black holes will eventually consume all the matter in the universe and then decay leaving an empty void like place.
I put other but this is one of what I think are the better theories. I should have voted keep expanding.
caught my mistake, BT
 
  • #9
I am new, and voted that it will keep expanding. It is the safe bet to me, unless the string theorists' membranes are right. That might be other.
 
  • #10
Not with a bang
but a whimper.
 
  • #11
nismaratwork said:
I am new, and voted that it will keep expanding. It is the safe bet to me, unless the string theorists' membranes are right. That might be other.

Cosmology does not rest on safe bets.
There are possibly more options that membranes, and we do not all the possible options that may come to light in the future.
 
  • #12
shunyadragon said:
Cosmology does not rest on safe bets.
There are possibly more options that membranes, and we do not all the possible options that may come to light in the future.

However M-theory is the best we currently suppose. Right?

cheers, BT
 
  • #13
M-Theory is the conjecture offshoot of String Theory, which is also conjecture. That is not a safe or unsafe bet, it is a matter of cosmology versus undemonstrated and possibly undemonstratable fantasy.
 
  • #14
Can the universe expand faster then the speed of light?
 
  • #15
brushman said:
Can the universe expand faster then the speed of light?

After the inflationary epoch, I don't think so. Are you thinking of galactic recession speeds as a result of expansion? That is a somewhat different matter.
 
  • #16
How about this.
Space is infinite and portions of it are filled with matter.
Our "observable universe" is made up of some of this matter and is expanding.
Who is to say that other portions of space are not also filled with matter that has created galaxys, suns and planets etc. ( Multiverse theory )
Simply, we zoom out from our solar system and observe more stars sytems, zoom out more and see our galaxy, zoom out again and see more galaxys and observe that they are traveling away from each other, zoom out much more and observe other area's of space are undergoing the same process. ( take a A3 piece of paper, drop several grains of sand on it, one of those is our " observable universe. There are infinite sheets of A3 sheets. )
How it will end? If it all drifts away, then surely all the galaxys will eventually become dead and drift through space and all matter from our " observable universe " will drift further apart so no Big Crunch. Just drifting dead stars and planets.
Would the matter drift and become attracted to other drifts of matter from other dead universe systems? Given enough time of course. As these drifts gather more material could there be a tipping point where it collapses or something and fuels a runaway recycling proceedure that is essentially a big bang?... This could go on forever and may already have been. Think big.
 
  • #17
We could call it universal mitosis.
 
  • #18
pjknight said:
How about this.
Space is infinite and portions of it are filled with matter.
Our "observable universe" is made up of some of this matter and is expanding.
Who is to say that other portions of space are not also filled with matter that has created galaxys, suns and planets etc. ( Multiverse theory )
Simply, we zoom out from our solar system and observe more stars sytems, zoom out more and see our galaxy, zoom out again and see more galaxys and observe that they are traveling away from each other, zoom out much more and observe other area's of space are undergoing the same process. ( take a A3 piece of paper, drop several grains of sand on it, one of those is our " observable universe. There are infinite sheets of A3 sheets. )
How it will end? If it all drifts away, then surely all the galaxys will eventually become dead and drift through space and all matter from our " observable universe " will drift further apart so no Big Crunch. Just drifting dead stars and planets.
Would the matter drift and become attracted to other drifts of matter from other dead universe systems? Given enough time of course. As these drifts gather more material could there be a tipping point where it collapses or something and fuels a runaway recycling proceedure that is essentially a big bang?... This could go on forever and may already have been. Think big.

What is another universe if not a region with a different set of physical constants? If the universe is infinite, and infinitely expanding then recession speeds still mean our observable region will "die" and expand eternally. If you mean that there are separate universes from ours, not within the same spacetime, then Blandrew is making the right point, and the expanding dust and radiation will define the edge of our spacetime. To move from one set of physical constants to another, another universe, requires more than expansion in our 3+1 space and time.

I've read magazine-level multiverse theories of "bubble" universes eventually colliding, but what happens then is really just a guess. I find it hard to believe that, if they interact at all, it would be a simple merger like two galaxies; the best guess I've heard is that they might pass through each other, or that the cosmological constant of a given universe would make it overwhelming fo the other.

So, we have infinite space and more homogeneous isotropic "stuff" outside of our view, but within the same universe, in which case recession speeds mean they never meet, different dimensions or membranes, in which case they never meet, or bubbles which MAY meet, but will have different "laws of physics" and are unlikely to get along.
 
  • #19
Quick question. If all the galaxies are red-shifted beyond the visible spectrum, wouldn't people theoretically be able to detect the x-rays and gamma rays emmitted from them? That is... if there is some sort of history they can reflect on that shows what is really out there. Also, I think something unexpected will happen in the universe, it is a mysterious place afterall.
 
  • #20
Entropee said:
Quick question. If all the galaxies are red-shifted beyond the visible spectrum, wouldn't people theoretically be able to detect the x-rays and gamma rays emmitted from them? That is... if there is some sort of history they can reflect on that shows what is really out there. Also, I think something unexpected will happen in the universe, it is a mysterious place afterall.

Your question seems to be a combination of two notions, the first being galactic recession speeds, and after some long period of time, nothing would be detectable. The other relates more to our limit in looking to around 380,000 years after the Big Bang, the CMB. We already see what is "out there" such as the AGNs that are Quasars. We can't see beyond the CMB directly however.

Betting on a surprise is safe, but too vague to be meaningful.
 
  • #21
I was referring to a previous comment on the first page, probably should have quoted it. And being any less vague would contradict what I was saying in the first place.
 
  • #22
nismaratwork said:
So, we have infinite space and more homogeneous isotropic "stuff" outside of our view, but within the same universe, in which case recession speeds mean they never meet, different dimensions or membranes, in which case they never meet, or bubbles which MAY meet, but will have different "laws of physics" and are unlikely to get along.

This could very well be the case, but i don't believe space to be all that fancy, no matter where you are. I reckon space is just as ordinary as the space between me and the wall, between the Earth and moon and as dull as the space between galaxys. The only thing that makes any of these spaces different is the concentration of matter, be it a few gas atoms in between the galaxys or the pressured air on earth.
If we drop everything we think we know about big bangs and membranes etc then could
"Galaxy clouds separated by great distance" eventually merge. Thus enabling galaxy clouds to to swap matter as they disperse. I don't see the difference between two galaxys merging in our own "Galaxy cloud" and one merging with another that has its origins far away.

Terms that i use;
Galaxy; the collection of stars.
Galaxy cloud; the collection of galaxys, just much bigger. ( Galaxy cloud, a group of galaxys spreading from a single area.)
The universe; everything. In it we see an unimaginable collection of galaxy clouds.

As you can see, I am aiming for the simplest and biggest explanation.

But, if this theory was the one; where does it get all its energy from? Would the universe and all its galaxy clouds want to come to rest as it uses up all its energy, eventually leaving us with static clouds of matter and gas spread across space? What set it all in motion in the first place? The mind boggles...
 
  • #23
pjknight said:
This could very well be the case, but i don't believe space to be all that fancy, no matter where you are. I reckon space is just as ordinary as the space between me and the wall, between the Earth and moon and as dull as the space between galaxys. The only thing that makes any of these spaces different is the concentration of matter, be it a few gas atoms in between the galaxys or the pressured air on earth.
If we drop everything we think we know about big bangs and membranes etc then could
"Galaxy clouds separated by great distance" eventually merge. Thus enabling galaxy clouds to to swap matter as they disperse. I don't see the difference between two galaxys merging in our own "Galaxy cloud" and one merging with another that has its origins far away.

Terms that i use;
Galaxy; the collection of stars.
Galaxy cloud; the collection of galaxys, just much bigger. ( Galaxy cloud, a group of galaxys spreading from a single area.)
The universe; everything. In it we see an unimaginable collection of galaxy clouds.

As you can see, I am aiming for the simplest and biggest explanation.

But, if this theory was the one; where does it get all its energy from? Would the universe and all its galaxy clouds want to come to rest as it uses up all its energy, eventually leaving us with static clouds of matter and gas spread across space? What set it all in motion in the first place? The mind boggles...

Where energy comes from, how it is created or not, isn't he bailiwick of current physics, so I think it's safe to boggle, but while energy within a system can become "dilute", it cannot be "used up".
 

1. How did scientists come up with theories about the end of the universe?

Scientists have been studying the universe for centuries, using observations and mathematical models to understand its origins and evolution. Through this research, they have been able to come up with various theories about the end of the universe.

2. What are the main theories about the end of the universe?

There are several theories about the end of the universe, including the Big Crunch, the Big Freeze, the Big Rip, and the Big Bounce. These theories are based on different factors such as the expansion rate of the universe, dark energy, and the amount of matter in the universe.

3. Will the end of the universe happen suddenly or gradually?

It is difficult to say for certain, but based on current theories, it is likely that the end of the universe will happen gradually over a very long period of time. This is because the processes that will lead to the end of the universe, such as the expansion of the universe and the cooling of stars, occur over long periods of time.

4. Is there a possibility of the universe collapsing in on itself?

Yes, according to the Big Crunch theory, there is a possibility that the universe will eventually stop expanding and begin to collapse in on itself. This would result in a reversal of the Big Bang and the universe would end in a massive implosion.

5. How will the end of the universe affect life on Earth?

It is difficult to predict exactly how life on Earth will be affected by the end of the universe, as it will depend on which theory turns out to be true. However, it is likely that as the universe expands and cools, life on Earth will become unsustainable and eventually cease to exist. This could happen gradually or suddenly, depending on the specific theory of the end of the universe.

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