The universe is dying
Discussion
I love stuff about space.
No wonder really, there's only so much energy!
Although it does beg the question, in a few billion years what actually happens?
I know the world will end, the Sun will die, expand, go supernova and melt us all - But as people, as species, and as one of probably a whole collection of other worlds, what are we going to do?
Or will we all float around in space in ships with home grown food etc.
No wonder really, there's only so much energy!
Although it does beg the question, in a few billion years what actually happens?
I know the world will end, the Sun will die, expand, go supernova and melt us all - But as people, as species, and as one of probably a whole collection of other worlds, what are we going to do?
Or will we all float around in space in ships with home grown food etc.
Hasn't it always been thus - the amount of thermodynamic free energy in any closed system will always tends to zero over time.
It's a consequence of the 2nd law of thermodynamics.
The universe has been in a constant state of "dying" ever since it came to be (in much the same way as humans).
It's a consequence of the 2nd law of thermodynamics.
The universe has been in a constant state of "dying" ever since it came to be (in much the same way as humans).
xjay1337 said:
I love stuff about space.
No wonder really, there's only so much energy!
Although it does beg the question, in a few billion years what actually happens?
I know the world will end, the Sun will die, expand, go supernova and melt us all - But as people, as species, and as one of probably a whole collection of other worlds, what are we going to do?
Or will we all float around in space in ships with home grown food etc.
Highly likely the human race will be well extinct by then!No wonder really, there's only so much energy!
Although it does beg the question, in a few billion years what actually happens?
I know the world will end, the Sun will die, expand, go supernova and melt us all - But as people, as species, and as one of probably a whole collection of other worlds, what are we going to do?
Or will we all float around in space in ships with home grown food etc.
ash73 said:
Is that right? I think the amount of energy is the same, but it's dispersed as EM radiation as entropy increases. I'm just surprised the rate of star formation has reduced so significantly, as the universe is still very young.
Yes the total amount of energy is the same - but the amount of thermodynamic free energy (i.e. the energy available to do work decreases as entropy increases)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermodynamic_free_e...
Heat death of the Universe is when entropy is maximum - completely random and nothing left to do work. Information is order, so maximum entropy is a minimum in information. Information is currently increasing as we find and research more. Therefore, there will become a time when we can know no more, and as time progresses further we will know less.
Discuss. (10 marks).
Discuss. (10 marks).
Edited by V8LM on Wednesday 12th August 23:35
V8LM said:
Heat death of the Universe is when entropy is maximum - completely random and nothing left to do work. Information is order, so maximum entropy is a minimum in information. Information is currently increasing as we find and research more. Therefore, there will become a time when we can know no more, and as time progresses further we will know less.
Discuss. (10 marks).
What's more random:Discuss. (10 marks).
. . .
. . .
. . .
or
. ..
.. .
...
The former is 'heat death' even distribution, the latter clumpy 'energy' of our current universe. The former looks ordered, the latter random but the latter is required to store information.
Given the time scales to heat death are not mere billions of years off but even more incomprehensibly far off (the last black hole that will ever form won't decay for 10^100 years after that) we're not on any pressing time frames.
What 'life' would look like at the very end of the universe would be hard to comprehend. Pure energy beings ekeing out an existence on the event horizon of that last black hole?
I'm not convinced that we can conflate the idea of knowledge with the ability to
Hugo a Gogo said:
IainT said:
Given the time scales to heat death are not mere billions of years off but even more incomprehensibly far off (the last black hole that will ever form won't decay for 10^100 years after that) we're not on any pressing time frames.
phew, that's a reliefash73 said:
Is that right? I think the amount of energy is the same, but it's dispersed as EM radiation as entropy increases. I'm just surprised the rate of star formation has reduced so significantly, as the universe is still very young.
How do we know the Universe is young? We haven't observed any other universes to make that judgement against surely, we don't know how old a universe can be? For all we know, the universe is actually on the wrong side of middle aged?AshVX220 said:
ash73 said:
Is that right? I think the amount of energy is the same, but it's dispersed as EM radiation as entropy increases. I'm just surprised the rate of star formation has reduced so significantly, as the universe is still very young.
How do we know the Universe is young? We haven't observed any other universes to make that judgement against surely, we don't know how old a universe can be? For all we know, the universe is actually on the wrong side of middle aged?IainT said:
AshVX220 said:
ash73 said:
Is that right? I think the amount of energy is the same, but it's dispersed as EM radiation as entropy increases. I'm just surprised the rate of star formation has reduced so significantly, as the universe is still very young.
How do we know the Universe is young? We haven't observed any other universes to make that judgement against surely, we don't know how old a universe can be? For all we know, the universe is actually on the wrong side of middle aged?ash73 said:
AshVX220 said:
How do we know the Universe is young?
Star formation will cease in 100 trillion years... and the universe is only 0.0138 trillion years old.Stelliferous era
To ascribe young-middle-old equal lengths would be foolish.
ash73 said:
And yet mankind's constant need to be at the centre of everything forces us to use a log plot
Pointless and somewhat foolish comment and apropos of nothing.Edited by IainT on Thursday 13th August 12:17
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