The fate of the universe may be determined by its density. The preponderance of evidence to date, based on measurements of the rate of expansion and the mass density, favors a universe that will continue to expand indefinitely, resulting in the "Big Freeze" scenario below. However, observations are not conclusive, and alternative models are still possible.
Big Freeze or Heat Death The heat death of the universe, also known as the Big Freeze (or Big Chill), is a scenario under which continued expansion results in a universe that
asymptotically approaches
absolute zero temperature. Under this scenario, the universe eventually reaches a state of maximum
entropy in which everything is evenly distributed and there are no energy
gradients—which are needed to sustain information processing, one form of which is
life. This scenario has gained ground as the most likely fate. In this scenario,
stars are expected to form normally for 1012 to 1014 (1–100 trillion) years, but eventually the supply of gas needed for
star formation will be exhausted. As existing stars run out of fuel and cease to shine, the universe will slowly and inexorably grow darker. Eventually
black holes will dominate the universe, but they will disappear over time as they emit
Hawking radiation. Over infinite time, there could be a spontaneous
entropy decrease by the
Poincaré recurrence theorem,
thermal fluctuations, and the
fluctuation theorem. The heat death scenario is compatible with any of the three spatial models, but it requires that the universe reaches an eventual temperature minimum. Without dark energy, it could occur only under a flat or hyperbolic geometry. With a positive cosmological constant, it could also occur in a closed universe.
Dyson's eternal intelligence In his 1979 paper "Time Without End: Physics and Biology in an Open Universe," physicist
Freeman Dyson proposed a scenario for the far future in which intelligent life could achieve a form of immortality by processing an infinite number of thoughts. This concept, known as "
Dyson's eternal intelligence," was originally predicated on an open universe, a cosmological model that expands forever. In the context of a zero cosmological constant (a flat or open universe without dark energy), the universe would continue to cool as it expands, but at a decelerating rate. Dyson's idea was that intelligent beings could store a finite amount of energy and expend it in increasingly smaller fractions. After each expenditure of energy for thought processes, these beings would enter a state of hibernation for immense periods, allowing the universe to cool further. As the ambient temperature of the universe drops, the minimum energy required for a computation (a thought) also decreases, theoretically allowing for an infinite number of thoughts to be processed over an infinite subjective time, even with a finite energy reserve. However, this scenario faces challenges, as the discovery of an accelerating expansion, driven by a positive cosmological constant, suggests that the universe will not continue to cool indefinitely and distant regions will become causally disconnected, which would prevent the indefinite survival envisioned by Dyson.
Big Rip The current
Hubble constant defines a rate of acceleration of the universe not large enough to destroy local structures like galaxies, which are held together by gravity, but large enough to increase the space between them. A steady increase in the Hubble constant to infinity would result in all material objects in the universe, starting with galaxies and eventually (in a finite time) all forms, no matter how small, disintegrating into unbound
elementary particles, radiation and beyond. As the energy density, scale factor and expansion rate become infinite, the universe ends as what is effectively a singularity. In the special case of
phantom dark energy, which has supposed negative kinetic energy that would result in a higher rate of acceleration than other cosmological constants predict, a more sudden big rip could occur.
Big Crunch The
Big Crunch hypothesis is a symmetric view of the ultimate fate of the universe. Just as the theorized Big Bang started as a cosmological expansion, this theory assumes that the average density of the universe will be enough to stop its expansion and the universe will begin contracting. The result is unknown; a simple estimation would have all the matter and spacetime in the universe collapse into a dimensionless
singularity back into how the universe started with the Big Bang, but at these scales unknown quantum effects need to be considered (see
Quantum gravity). Recent evidence suggests that this scenario is unlikely but has not been ruled out, as measurements have been available only over a relatively short period of time and could reverse in the future. Therefore, quantum mechanics has given rise to an alternative version of the Big Bang theory, specifically that the universe
tunneled into existence and had a finite density consistent with quantum mechanics, before evolving in a manner governed by classical physics. Also, if the universe is closed, this theory would predict that once this universe collapses it will spawn another universe in an event similar to the Big Bang after a universal singularity is reached or a repulsive quantum force causes re-expansion. In simple terms, this theory states that the universe will continuously repeat the cycle of a Big Bang, followed by a Big Crunch.
Cosmic uncertainty Each possibility described so far is based on a simple form of the dark energy equation of state. However, as the name implies, little is now known about the physics of
dark energy. If the theory of
inflation is true, the universe went through an episode dominated by a different form of dark energy in the first moments of the Big Bang, but inflation ended, indicating an equation of state more complex than those assumed for present-day dark energy. It is possible that the dark energy equation of state could change again, resulting in an event that would have consequences which are difficult to predict or parameterize. As the nature of dark energy and dark matter remain enigmatic, even hypothetical, the possibilities surrounding their role in the universe are unknown. == Other possible fates of the universe ==