dubau2 said:
I know that there are many different subscriptions on how the universe will end, and I have a question...
This is my personal view on the questions you raise. I'm sure you know what skepticism is---holding back on belief, methodically examining the different possibilities without making a premature commitment to one or the other.
All these things have to be studied. The different ways the U could have evolved and be going to evolve in future. I think you said you are a physics student---high school, college whatever. You quite possibly don't have time to go into this methodically and do careful comparison of alternative models. You probably need to study your coursework, pass the tests, write the term-papers etc.
You arent likely to miss out on much by focusing on immediate job at hand. Cosmology only recently became a precision science (with instruments like Hubble telescope and WMAP microwave.) It is also undergoing a revolution because of quantum cosmology, the possibility that the big bang was actually a bounce. These things are too speculative and tentative to be easy to study now. The problems are not going to be solved in a hurry either! The experts are really just getting started. The problems will still be there in 4 or 5 years.
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That said, I'm willing to make a stab at trying to answer pretty much any question about cosmology and quantum cosmology (QC). I don't do research, I just follow the scene as a spectator.
Cosmologists business is to construct different math models of the universe and see which models fit the data best. But they also study a variety of less realistic cases just for understanding the range of possibilities. They run computer simulations of different cases to see what will happen. So it isn't all focused on one favorite or most likely model.
they now have a lot of data. millions of data points. to fit their models to, and they have a best-fit LCDM model which is the current favorite ("lambda cold dark matter").
If you ask a cosmologist to predict the future of our universe all he can do is tell you the future according to the best-fit LCDM model universe---the experts can't actually KNOW the future, they can only project using reasonably good-fit models.
LCDM continues expanding forever and does not do a crunch, and does not do a "big rip" or anything dramatic and Hollywood like that. there is a gradual acceleration but the effects are not very remarkable. local galaxies merge into one large conglomerate galaxy which stays together indefinitely as the stars gradually burn out. more distant galaxies get so far away they effectively vanish from sight.
Not to take this too seriously

It's good science, given present knowledge, but eventually there will be new data, the favorite best-fit model will change, our prospects of the the future may change, based on a slightly different model. science keeps on getting better. instruments get better etc. new ideas gradually come to light etc.
I personally think that in 4 or 5 years we will know a good deal more about the past surrounding and before the big bang. There will be more books about this, more research papers to read, more conferences. And people will have found ways to test the mathematical models that have a bounce. Because they will predict slightly different stuff that we can observe. and check to see if they are wrong or not.
I personally don't expect the consensus vision of the future to change as much as how we picture events right before and around the big bang---if we are talking on a 4 or 5 years timescale. We will still have the LCDM, but it will probably be extended back a bit with some kind of QC bounce instead of a singularity.