04-12-2010, 10:35 AM
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#458
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Norm!
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jetsfan
This is really interesting.
If our universe really does exist at the centre of a black hole in another universe this may provide a clue to the fate of our universe.
Stephen Hawking proposed that black holes were not entirely black. They emit radiation. The energy that produces the radiation comes from the mass of the black hole. As the radiation is emitted, the black hole loses mass. The black hole emits more radiation the smaller it gets. In effect, a black hole evaporates more quickly as it shrinks.
http://www.universetoday.com/guide-t...ck-hole-facts/
If the black hole that our universe is located in evaporates that could explain why the expansion of our universe is speeding up.
That means that the 100 billion or so galaxies we can now see though our telescopes will zip out of range, one by one. Tens of billions of years from now, the Milky Way will be the only galaxy we're directly aware of (other nearby galaxies, including the Large Magellanic Cloud and the Andromeda galaxy, will have drifted into, and merged with, the Milky Way).
By then the sun will have shrunk to a white dwarf, giving little light and even less heat to whatever is left of Earth, and entered a long, lingering death that could last 100 trillion years—or a thousand times longer than the cosmos has existed to date. The same will happen to most other stars, although a few will end their lives as blazing supernovas. Finally, though, all that will be left in the cosmos will be black holes, the burnt-out cinders of stars and the dead husks of planets. The universe will be cold and black. But that's not the end, according to University of Michigan astrophysicist Fred Adams. An expert on the fate of the cosmos and co-author with Greg Laughlin of The Five Ages of the Universe (Touchstone Books; 2000), Adams predicts that all this dead matter will eventually collapse into black holes. By the time the universe is 1 trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion years old, the black holes themselves will disintegrate into stray particles, which will bind loosely to form individual "atoms" larger than the size of today's universe. Eventually, even these will decay, leaving a featureless, infinitely large void. And that will be that—unless, of course, whatever inconceivable event that launched the original Big Bang should recur, and the ultimate free lunch is served once more.
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101010625/story.html
Our universe may end by ripping itself apart just like a drop of water evaporates on a hot surface.
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Hold me!
__________________
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
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