Joe L. Ogan
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Somewhere, I read about the "Big Rip Theory". Has anyone here heard about the Big Rip Theory? Joe L. Ogan
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The discussion centers around the "Big Rip Theory," a cosmological hypothesis regarding the ultimate fate of the universe. Participants explore various aspects of the theory, its implications, and its standing in current cosmological discourse.
Participants express differing views on the validity and acceptance of the Big Rip Theory. While some believe it is largely dismissed by the scientific community, others suggest it remains a possibility under certain conditions. The discussion reflects a lack of consensus regarding the theory's relevance and the implications of current cosmological data.
Participants note the historical context of the Big Rip Theory and its fluctuating prominence in scientific discourse. There are references to the limitations of current models and the potential for future data to alter the understanding of cosmic expansion.
marcus said:Joe, this is just a side comment: look at the DATES on the material that George just gave you links to.
I haven't heard much about "big rip" scenario since like 2005.
I remember hearing a lot about it back in 2003-2004 but the buzz died down some since then.
The present model that astronomers use, which seems a good fit to the data that has come in since 2005 (eg from spacecraft like WMAP) so far, does not do a big rip. It has accelerated expansion but the acceleration is rather gentle and doesn't disassemble our galaxy, or our solar system, or anything on that scale.
It is always possible that the data is wrong, and that future data will indicate different cosmic parameters and a different expansion history, and the "big rip" scenario could make a comeback and become a fashionable idea once more.
To be fair, the data doesn't have to be wrong. It just places a possible Big Rip in the far future, and is consistent with the null hypothesis "there will be no Big Rip".It is always possible that the data is wrong
This is slightly incorrect. If the universe is in a false vacuum state, then it will inflate (a false vacuum is a state with nonzero vacuum energy -- the stuff that drives the accelerated expansion.) If this state happens to decay in the future, one of two outcomes is possible: 1) it decays to a true vacuum and inflation stops or 2) it decays to another false vacuum of lower energy and continues to inflate at slower rate. At the present time, cosmologists don't know whether the universe exists in a false vacuum state.friend said:And some think we may be in a false vacuum state now that may one day fall and create a new round of inflationary expansion.