Difference between Big Chill and Big Snap scenarious

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The discussion revolves around the concepts of the "Big Snap" and "Big Chill" scenarios in cosmology, particularly in relation to the inflationary entropy problem. The "Big Snap" suggests that the universe's granular nature could disrupt particle physics, potentially leading to the end of life as we know it. However, some argue that this scenario is unlikely, as gamma ray burst measurements seem to rule it out. The conversation also touches on the role of dark energy and how it affects the number of degrees of freedom in the universe, with some proposing that these degrees are encoded on the cosmological horizon. Ultimately, the future of the universe may not lead to an empty Hubble volume due to factors like Hawking radiation.
Dmitry67
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Hi

Could you comment on Big Snap scenario briefly mentioned by Max Tegmark on page 12 (and I can't google more):

How unitary cosmology generalizes thermodynamics and solves the inflationary entropy problem
http://arxiv.org/abs/1108.3080

life as we know it may eventually be destroyed in a "Big Snap" when the increasingly granular nature of space begins to alter our effective laws of particle physics, much like a rubber band cannot be stretched indefinitely before the granular nature of its atoms cause our continuum description of it to break down

I understand that during the inflation the number of degrees of freedom per Hubble volume decreases, so life will be impossible. However, isn't it the same as "Big Chill" - cold empty dark universe?

Also, what's so special about gamma ray bursts?

Moreover, in the simplest scenarios where the number of observers is proportional to postinfationary volume, such Big Snap scenarios are already ruled out by dispersion measurements using gamma ray bursts.
 
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Eh, I doubt the "Big Snap" will turn out to be a real issue.

My argument is this. You can fully-describe our universe by only referencing the observable universe and the horizon set by the value of the cosmological constant: the degrees of freedom on this horizon encapsulate all of the degrees of freedom outside this horizon. In this model, the number of degrees of freedom is finite, constant, and independent of the dynamics of the expanding universe, so that you don't need to have any granulation effects in order to end up with a constant degrees of freedom.

Edit: Cool. He actually discusses this alternative approach. So it generally comes down to whether or not the holographic cosmology which I just laid out above is accurate. I think it is more likely to be, but we'll see (hopefully).
 
Chalnoth said:
In this model, the number of degrees of freedom is finite, constant, and independent of the dynamics of the expanding universe, so that you don't need to have any granulation effects in order to end up with a constant degrees of freedom.

But this is true only without dark energy, with it the matter (together with the associated degrees of freedom) constantly goes away thru the Hubble horizon, so we can end with an absolutely empty Hubble volume, without a single particle.
 
Dmitry67 said:
But this is true only without dark energy, with it the matter (together with the associated degrees of freedom) constantly goes away thru the Hubble horizon, so we can end with an absolutely empty Hubble volume, without a single particle.
No, the situation I described was with dark energy (specifically, a cosmological constant). Yes, it may look very different in terms of the number of particles. But that doesn't mean it isn't the same system. Particles that leave the horizon have their degrees of freedom encoded in the horizon.

The end future of this universe is not an absolutely empty Hubble volume, by the way, because there is Hawking radiation from the horizon.

Edit: Oh, and as for how the degrees of freedom are encoded on the horizon, I don't think anybody knows exactly (I'm sure many understand it better than I). But the horizon does grow in size with every particle that passes through it (analogous to the fact that a black hole's horizon grows with every particle that enters the black hole's horizon).
 
Chalnoth said:
The end future of this universe is not an absolutely empty Hubble volume, by the way, because there is Hawking radiation from the horizon.

I know. Even more: Hawking radiation "blocks" the Big Rip: very close to the rip, Hubble volumes become so tiny that the Hawking radiation (it's intensity grows much faster that the deterioration of space!) fills the space again with the particles, effectively "resetting" the expansion. I don't know if anybody had ever explored that model.

Chalnoth said:
Oh, and as for how the degrees of freedom are encoded on the horizon, I don't think anybody knows exactly

And it's a pity because I that was my very next question :)
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
Why was the Hubble constant assumed to be decreasing and slowing down (decelerating) the expansion rate of the Universe, while at the same time Dark Energy is presumably accelerating the expansion? And to thicken the plot. recent news from NASA indicates that the Hubble constant is now increasing. Can you clarify this enigma? Also., if the Hubble constant eventually decreases, why is there a lower limit to its value?
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