KholdStunner Posted March 11, 2005 Posted March 11, 2005 so far there are only 2 theories of how the universe will 'end' 1- The big crunch: the gravity in the universe is so powerful that over-powers the expanding universe and it all comes back to one place and eventually we have a reverse-big-bang 2- The Big Freeze: the universe will continue to expand and all stars will eventually burn out and the universe will become dark, frozen, and time will have practically stopped. do i have this info right? wrong? close? Please add-on or correct this.
J.C.MacSwell Posted March 11, 2005 Posted March 11, 2005 so far there are only 2 theories of how the universe will 'end' 1- The big crunch: the gravity in the universe is so powerful that over-powers the expanding universe and it all comes back to one place and eventually we have a reverse-big-bang 2- The Big Freeze: the universe will continue to expand and all stars will eventually burn out and the universe will become dark' date=' frozen, and time will have practically stopped. do i have this info right? wrong? close? Please add-on or correct this.[/quote'] Why will time practically stop?
Ophiolite Posted March 11, 2005 Posted March 11, 2005 I think it's a poetic way of saying little will happen.
KholdStunner Posted March 12, 2005 Author Posted March 12, 2005 well, actually, there will be massive black holes (the size of 10-100 billions stars) scattered through the universe almost everywhere you look. And some of them will continue to grow. And basically everything will be locked inside a blackhole. Atleast thats what i believe a subtheory of the big freeze is. and yes i did not mean time will completely stop literally, like opiolite said
Syd Posted March 12, 2005 Posted March 12, 2005 I like the idea of everything locked inside black holes. But i think it will be just another phase of the Big Freeze, couse after some time black hole will also disappear. Universe will be full of radiation, entrophy will be the highest/ or lowest, i cant remember how it goes/ Anyway, life will be impossible
Bettina Posted March 12, 2005 Posted March 12, 2005 Life will be impossible for any species, but time per se will not stop. Although if nobody is left then what exactly is time good for. Eventually even the black holes will evaporate though it will be many trillions of years after the last fire goes out before they do. I don't know how long it will take after that before matter itself breaks down too. Not to worry..... I expect another big bang will happen somewhere at sometime, and start this whole discussion over again Bettina
star dust Posted March 21, 2005 Posted March 21, 2005 this discussion could be be happening all over the universe by loads of humanoid type creatures... weird.
Severian Posted March 21, 2005 Posted March 21, 2005 The Big Freeze is more commonly known as 'The Heat Death of The Universe'.
Martin Posted March 22, 2005 Posted March 22, 2005 Life will be impossible for any species' date=' but time per se will not stop. Although if nobody is left then what exactly is time good for. Eventually even the black holes will evaporate though it will be many trillions of years after the last fire goes out before they do. I don't know how long it will take after that before matter itself breaks down too. Not to worry..... I expect another big bang will happen somewhere at sometime, and start this whole discussion over again Bettina[/quote'] For some reason I like the sentence "Eventually even the black holes will evaporate though it will be many trillions of years after the last fire goes out before they do." maybe it just a lucky way the words fell together i.e.style I wish you would read a sample from Lee Smolin about cosmic natural selection based on LQG one can argue that what are classically viewed as singularities at bigbang and blackhole are not singularities (LQG does not break down there but continues) and that one can merge into the other. the collapse non-singularity at the pit of a BH can continue on to form the expanding non-singularity of a new BB inflation (which occurs naturally in LQG without a lot of extra paraphernalia or fine tuning) can supply the necessary energy and matter for the new universe. so while the mother U gets emptier and colder, other ones bud off from it at its blackhole branchpoints (these create new futures, time is not a single line) well it is an interesting idea and Smolin is one of the best theoretical physicists around and the hypothesis is testable. he offers suggestions as to observational ways it might be shot down, if wrong. he has a book about this called Lives of the Cosmos, or Life of the Cosmos and there is stuff on the web under the heading "cosmic natural selection" or CNS, but the only thing I have read is a technical paper that came out last year and is due to be published in a collection by IIRC Cambridge U press. the technical paper is called "Scientific Alternatives to the Anthropic Principle" http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0407213 there is a link to a PDF of the full article if anyone wants. it has some non-mathematical parts that are intuitive, you just have to look for them interspersed amongst the harder pieces
Martin Posted March 22, 2005 Posted March 22, 2005 so far there are only 2 theories of how the universe will 'end' 1- The big crunch: the gravity in the universe is so powerful that over-powers the expanding universe and it all comes back to one place and eventually we have a reverse-big-bang 2- The Big Freeze: the universe will continue to expand and all stars will eventually burn out and the universe will become dark' date=' frozen, and time will have practically stopped. do i have this info right? wrong? close? Please add-on or correct this.[/quote'] I think wrong. I am glad you asked people to add-on. that was nice because it leaves open for a third or fourth possible picture. I will give a third possible picture. first of all some people talk about the universe ending in a singularity. But singularities do not exist in nature, they exist in theories and they occur where theories break down, having reached the limits of their applicability the way to fix a singularity is to improve the theory the idea of "universe ends" is not clear even if the universe gets too cold or hot or disorderly for any conceivable life, IT still goes on it merely goes on in a condition which we living beings do not find interesting and which we dont want to think about. so I think you might productively reword the question about the Extreme Future(s) of the universe, beyond where we can picture life surviving---I dont know how to word this A third picture besides your Too Hot collapse and your Too Cold thinning out is the picture that time branches where there is a black hole so time if very FORKED In this picture, our universe has already given rise to millions of new universes---since it makes a new one whenever a black hole forms (because in LQG collapse leads to a bounce along which spacetime continues and in LQG inflation is generic: it happens without a lot of extra paraphernalia and finetunig, Ganashyam Date wrote a paper about this recently, and the universe exits from inflation automatically after a certain condition is reached---the so called 'graceful exit') In LQG the bigbang non-singularity looks rather much like the blackhole non-singularity except viewed from the other side. Whatever matter collapses in the BH is amplified by inflation as space re-expands so this Forked Time picture is one possible picture and it would not be very interesting unless it were possible to TEST it by experiment/observation. A scientific theory should make predictions that would allow it to be refuted or falsified if we then observe stuff that is contrary to the predictions. If a picture doesnt make predictions it is just a daydream and doesnt explain anything. So this picture has some predictions connected with it which are discussed in the Smolin paper "Scientific Alternatives to the Anthropic Principle" http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0407213 maybe it will be tested and proven wrong, but it hasnt been proven wrong yet
Auburngirl05 Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 Stephen Hawking was a major proponent of the "big crunch" theory, but not long ago he issued a statement saying that he had been wrong about many things in the postulation, basically "recanting". Astronomy and cosmology isn't a strong subject for me so I don't know the details of what he was mistaken on, just felt like it was worth mentioning.
mustang292 Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 Pssssst! I know how the Universe will end! http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101010625/index.html <---It is explained right here. If the cosmos is moving at escape velocity, no Big Crunch.
Bettina Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 For some reason I like the sentence"Eventually even the black holes will evaporate though it will be many trillions of years after the last fire goes out before they do." maybe it just a lucky way the words fell together i.e.style I wish you would read a sample from Lee Smolin about cosmic natural selection based on LQG one can argue that what are classically viewed as singularities at bigbang and blackhole are not singularities (LQG does not break down there but continues) and that one can merge into the other. the collapse non-singularity at the pit of a BH can continue on to form the expanding non-singularity of a new BB inflation (which occurs naturally in LQG without a lot of extra paraphernalia or fine tuning) can supply the necessary energy and matter for the new universe. so while the mother U gets emptier and colder' date=' other ones bud off from it at its blackhole branchpoints (these create new futures, time is not a single line) well it is an interesting idea and Smolin is one of the best theoretical physicists around and the hypothesis is testable. he offers suggestions as to observational ways it might be shot down, if wrong. he has a book about this called Lives of the Cosmos, or Life of the Cosmos and there is stuff on the web under the heading "cosmic natural selection" or CNS, but the only thing I have read is a technical paper that came out last year and is due to be published in a collection by IIRC Cambridge U press. the technical paper is called "Scientific Alternatives to the Anthropic Principle" http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0407213 there is a link to a PDF of the full article if anyone wants. it has some non-mathematical parts that are intuitive, you just have to look for them interspersed amongst the harder pieces[/quote'] Thanks for the links. Loop quantum gravity is new to me. I like it. From what I've read, and in plain english, the reverse big bang isn't going to happen and that leaves the universe ending in a singularity out the door. At least for now. This is "good" anyway, because life will be around longer in an open universe than a closed one since life can adapt to a cold environment more readily than a hot one. So, life will keep adapting and who knows, maybe whats left of us will end up frozen and preserved in stone for whatever miracle takes place next. If the miracle doesn't occur at that stage, then matter itself, including black holes, will break down into photons and neutrinos and from what I'm told "Mother U" will end up as just pure radiation. Either way, it will be cold, dark, unpleasant and very unknowing if any intellegence can survive as radiation. But like I said, another big bang can occur. If one did, why can't another. I kind of wonder if there are more universes out there, but thats another story. Bettina
5614 Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 the reverse big bang isn't going to happen and that leaves the universe ending in a singularity out the door. These are all theories, none are certain... it is effectively impossible to currently rule out the main theories (1. we keep expanding or 2. universe stops expanding and all comes back in on itself aka 'reverse big bang') because we simply do not know and we personally probably never will, our great great etc grandchildren may.
Bettina Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 These are all theories, none are certain... it is effectively impossible to currently rule out the main theories (1. we keep expanding or 2. universe stops expanding and all comes back in on itself aka 'reverse big bang') because we simply do not know and we personally probably never will, our great great etc grandchildren may. I agree. When we make statements like I did, it is based on the current thoughts. Consider a scale which tips both ways. If the evidence is strong to tip the scale much farther to one side, then that model is considered the accepted one. It doesn't mean its set in concrete. Right now, the model is for a non collapsing universe and thats what I believe now unless the scale changes. In fact, I found some old cosmology books that had the scale tipped the other way, but they were old. Bettina
5614 Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 Right now, the model is for a non collapsing universe and thats what I believe now unless the scale changes. In fact, I found some old cosmology books that had the scale tipped the other way, but they were old. Sure the scales will tip with time, a quote from Einstein (when he was a professor was): Student: "Einstein, this year's exam paper had the same questions as last year" Einstein: "Yes, but this year all the answers are different" (or something along those lines) Is there a conclusive non-biased source that says that the scales are tipped? As far as I was aware it was not particuarly tipped either way, but then that's because I see/know an equally strong argument both for and against each of the two theories, so to me it's quite even.
Bettina Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 Sure the scales will tip with time' date=' a quote from Einstein (when he was a professor was):Student: "Einstein, this year's exam paper had the same questions as last year" Einstein: "Yes, but this year all the answers are different" ([i']or something along those lines[/i]) Is there a conclusive non-biased source that says that the scales are tipped? As far as I was aware it was not particuarly tipped either way, but then that's because I see/know an equally strong argument both for and against each of the two theories, so to me it's quite even. Its here.... http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/m_mm/mr_limits.html
5614 Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 OK, fair enough... in that case I'll settle saying: then that model is considered the accepted one. It doesn't mean its set in concrete. The nature of the dark energy is still a mystery. If it changes with time, or if other unknown and unexpected things happen in the universe, this conclusion could change
Ophiolite Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 The most elegant solution would be that we live in an oscillating Universe. That would match the oscillating character of our theories: metaphysics reflecting cosmology.
Bettina Posted March 23, 2005 Posted March 23, 2005 OK, fair enough... in that case I'll settle saying: Originally Posted by Bettina then that model is considered the accepted one. It doesn't mean its set in concrete. Originally Posted by NASA website in Bettina's post The nature of the dark energy is still a mystery. If it changes with time, or if other unknown and unexpected things happen in the universe, this conclusion could change Not quite.....it really says this For the theory that fits our data, the Universe will expand forever. (The nature of the dark energy is still a mystery. If it changes with time, or if other unknown and unexpected things happen in the universe, this conclusion could change.) __________________ Jonathan aka 5614 --- The funny thing about common sense is that it's not very common
KholdStunner Posted March 26, 2005 Author Posted March 26, 2005 well, there have certainly been a lot of posts, and i didnt have the time to read every word, so im sorry if im repeating what some1 else said. anyways i'll try to respond to a lot of the comments. -1st off, bettina said it would take trillions of years for the black holes to evaporate, and the universe will not continue for trillions of years. no matter which outcome the universe has chosen, it will only live around 20 billion years more. -martin said that no matter how cold or how hot the universe gets, "it" will still live on. NOT true, and this is a fact. Every particle in this universe of ours will decay. It takes about 10^35 years. so actually, the universe will not live on, because when the last star burns out, then all live will die. and when the last particle decays, the universe will die. no more nothing. -and if the big crunch occurs, instead of the big freeze, then all matter will be back to a single unit of matter (singularity). and i highly doubt another big bang could occur. because the universe has changed since it was all compacted in the 1st big bang. and it might have lost its materials used to create a big bang. -and, this is my opinion, but i think there is no way that there could possibly be another universe. i believe we r the one and only. Dont you all feel a little more special? haha.
Ophiolite Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 and when the last particle decays, the universe will die. no more nothing.And what are they decaying into? Nothing?
swansont Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 -1st off' date=' bettina said it would take trillions of years for the black holes to evaporate, and the universe will not continue for trillions of years. no matter which outcome the universe has chosen, it will only live around 20 billion years more. -martin said that no matter how cold or how hot the universe gets, "it" will still live on. NOT true, and this is a fact. Every particle in this universe of ours will decay. It takes about 10^35 years. so actually, the universe will not live on, because when the last star burns out, then all live will die. and when the last particle decays, the universe will die. no more nothing. [/quote'] 1035 is a lot bigger than 20 billion, so your two observations are inconsistent. The half-life for protons is an estimated lower bound, AFAIK, and as a statistical measure it does not mean that they all decay at that time - it means half of them will decay in that time. Half of the remaining ones in another half-life, etc. And, as was noted, they decay into something else. besides, we still have things like electrons and neutrinos zipping about.
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