Will cosmic microwave background disappear?

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The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is predicted to approach absolute zero as the universe expands indefinitely, according to the standard cosmological model. This phenomenon is part of the "heat death" scenario, where the universe becomes too cold to sustain life, often referred to as the "Big Freeze." As time progresses, all evidence of the universe's expansion, including the CMB, may vanish, leading to a static universe where observers cannot determine its true nature. This shift would signify the end of cosmology as we know it, marking a significant transformation in our understanding of the universe. Ultimately, the CMB will indeed disappear over billions of years.
maris205
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According to the standard cosmological model, the description for cosmic temperature falls is:T=A*t^-0.5. So when t-->infinite, T-->0.

It means the temperature of microwave background will approach 0k after billions of years.

Microwave background will disappear?:confused:
 
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Yep.
Despite the term "heat death", the temperature of the entire universe would be very close to absolute zero in this scenario. Heat death is however not quite the same as "cold death" or the "Big Freeze" in which the universe simply becomes too cold to sustain life due to continued expansion, though the result is quite similar.[6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_death
 
I agree with Russ Watters "Yep" pronouncement
here's a beautifully written article about that and other far-future conditions
by a firstrate cosmologist

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)
to appear, GRG October 2007
(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."

(5th prize 2007 Gravity Research Foundation Essay)
 
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