The fate of the Universe - big rip, then big crunch?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on theories regarding the fate of the universe, comparing it to the life cycle of a star, which expands and then collapses. It highlights the accelerating expansion of the universe, driven by dark energy, suggesting that a "big rip" scenario may occur rather than a "big crunch." The distinction is made that the Big Rip involves a future singularity due to super-acceleration, differing fundamentally from the Big Bang. Observational support for these models is debated, with some participants questioning the implications of galaxies moving towards known black holes. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the complexities of cosmological models and the ongoing exploration of the universe's ultimate fate.
DavidGahan
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I envision the Universe to be like a stellar sized star. When it expands, it explodes into a supernova, then collapses/contract into a black hole singularity. Since the Universe rate of expansion is accelerating, would it rip apart, and then contract into a singularity, just like the star?
 
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Perhaps the main issue with this sort of logic is that, unlike an exploding star, current theories do not envision a sort of large "explosion" like impulse for why the universe is accelerating. It is, instead, the effect of dark energy (which can be viewed many ways, one of which is an intrinsic property of volume/space) where the "force" of the expansion is always present. So there isn't necessarily going to be a "crunch" per say because the force of the expansion will continue what is it doing continuously. The force of gravity will not increase as the universe expands.

Your model sort of relates to an idea of a de-accelerating universe, where there was a "big rip" type event (the big bang) and it will eventually contract (big crunch). This view is not supported by observations.

So, in summary, star: big impulse, no continuous force/driver for expansion, universe: continuous expansion force.
 
DavidGahan said:
I envision the Universe to be like a stellar sized star. When it expands, it explodes into a supernova, then collapses/contract into a black hole singularity. Since the Universe rate of expansion is accelerating, would it rip apart, and then contract into a singularity, just like the star?

This doesn't make much sense. If you spell out your reasoning more, we might be able to help you get past some confusion about the big bang and cosmological models.
 
n1person said:
Your model sort of relates to an idea of a de-accelerating universe, where there was a "big rip" type event (the big bang) and it will eventually contract (big crunch). This view is not supported by observations.

I think you've misspoken. The Big Rip is the hypothesized end state of a universe that undergoes 'super'-acceleration -- acceleration described by an equation of state w < -1. In this scenario, the energy density of the universe grows with time (rather than remaining constant as it does in dark energy models) with the result that there is 'run away' acceleration -- eventually on all length scales. When the density grows to the point where homogeneity is achieved even on small scales -- like solar systems, people, atoms -- even these bound structures are pulled apart by the expansion. The Big Rip is not like the Big Bang -- it is a future singularity. It also may not eventually contract, that is a model dependent statement.

With respect to observations, this view is still in agreement with the latest constraints on w and dw/dz, the variation of w wrt redshift.
 
I heard that many galaxies are heading toward a 'known' black hole. This might affect everything of what we think of the Universe...
Sorry, correct me if I'm wrong, I'm new here...
 
AG Systems said:
I heard that many galaxies are heading toward a 'known' black hole. This might affect everything of what we think of the Universe...
Sorry, correct me if I'm wrong, I'm new here...
Welcome AG Systems. Are you referring to the Great Attractor? Or perhaps the more recent discovery of the 'dark flow'? As far as I know, neither of these involve black holes; the Great Attractor is most probably a supercluster, and the cause of the 'dark flow' is currently unknown, and the finding itself is controversial. However, even if galaxies were heading towards a known black hole, I doubt this would effect everything of what we think of the universe -- which is a pretty grand statement, and since all the physics involved is quite well understood.
 
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##.
The formal paper is here. The Rutgers University news has published a story about an image being closely examined at their New Brunswick campus. Here is an excerpt: Computer modeling of the gravitational lens by Keeton and Eid showed that the four visible foreground galaxies causing the gravitational bending couldn’t explain the details of the five-image pattern. Only with the addition of a large, invisible mass, in this case, a dark matter halo, could the model match the observations...
Hi, I’m pretty new to cosmology and I’m trying to get my head around the Big Bang and the potential infinite extent of the universe as a whole. There’s lots of misleading info out there but this forum and a few others have helped me and I just wanted to check I have the right idea. The Big Bang was the creation of space and time. At this instant t=0 space was infinite in size but the scale factor was zero. I’m picturing it (hopefully correctly) like an excel spreadsheet with infinite...

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