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Galactic Survey: The Universe Dying as Old Stars Fade Faster Than New Ones Are Born 199

astroengine writes: A study of more than 200,000 galaxies, encompassing wavelengths of light from the far ultraviolet to infrared, shows that the universe is producing half as much energy as it did 2 billion years ago and continues to fade. "Newer galaxies are simply putting out less energy than galaxies did in the past," astronomer Mehmet Alpaslan, with NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., told Discovery News. In other words, astronomers, for the first time, have gathered observational evidence that our universe is slowly marching toward its eventual heat death (in a few trillion years time).
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Galactic Survey: The Universe Dying as Old Stars Fade Faster Than New Ones Are Born

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  • is getting really old

  • I thought it would be a freeze death, no?

    • by fisted ( 2295862 )

      It's an entropy death.

    • it is supposed to be either expand and freeze, or collapse and crunch. Maybe there are many universe centers that expand and contract repeatedly. Each super black hole going through the cycle. If so, I wonder how far apart the Universe centers are?

      • Third Possible Fate (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Monday August 10, 2015 @08:10PM (#50289517) Journal

        it is supposed to be either expand and freeze, or collapse and crunch.

        Actually there is a third possibility: the big rip [wikipedia.org]. The expansion of the universe is accelerating and, if this continues and the Dark Energy driving it is of the right type, then space-time might literally rip itself apart.

        • How is that different from heat death?

          • Heat death we might be able to fight for a bit, converting matter into energy. Big rip might just tear our molecules apart...

          • How is that different from heat death?

            With heat death the universe continues for ever more either continuing to expand and reaching a finite size. Nothing ever changes it just goes on forever as a dead, lifeless void empty of stars and life. With the Big Rip the expansion accelerates until space-time itself is ripped apart and the universe is replaced by something else but what we cannot say hence the ultimate fate remains unknown which seems a lot less depressing than just heat death.

        • and a fourth [wikipedia.org].
      • I'd wager it depends on how big our universe's turtle is.

        • by sudon't ( 580652 )

          It has to do with how many turtles there are. Do they really go all the way down? How far is that? There are still many unanswered questions.

          As for the OP, think of it like this: When the heat dies, it will be very cold. Maybe "heat death" would make more sense expressed as "the death of heat".

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday August 10, 2015 @07:51PM (#50289375)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Since the metaphorical book is longer than can be read in a human lifetime, the ending is meaningless. We'll never know for sure.

      • by rbrander ( 73222 )

        Unless understanding the ending is a crucial step in physics towards new technologies that provide us with medicines or replicators or something.

        Man, it would be ironic if it enabled eternal life.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      Cold isn't a thing. Heat is a thing, a thing we call energy. Cold is just the lack of that heat/energy thing.

      Upon the heat death of the universe, the lack of heat aka cold will be quite alive and well, and isn't going anywhere. In fact it will be all there is.

      It is the heat aka energy that will be so diluted and evened out it may as well not exist anymore. Thus heat death.

      • by sudon't ( 580652 )

        I know you're right, but cold sure feels like a thing when it's -40 (C or F, your choice).

      • I don't think you understand what I said:

        Previously the common thinking was that the universe would likely go in one of two directions - endless expansion or eventual contraction, the endless expansion resulting in a "death by cold", due to entropy, there would no longer be any transference of energy between objects and everything would simply be neutral. The other being contraction, which would eventually bring everything closer and closer together - resulting in a "death by heat", where too much energy wo

        • by dissy ( 172727 )

          Ahh, now I see what you mean. Slight miscommunication I'm guessing.

          The usual way it is phrased is referencing the death of the heat within the universe, not the death of the universe itself.

          But from the point of view of the universe, I can see what you mean in that the universe itself will "die" from freezing. Especially compared to the alternative of a contracting universe's fate.

          Of course even that follows previous thinking that the universe will remain alive and well after this time, and only the heat/

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      In a way it is - or a dilution death where everything evaporates into small particles unable to find each other. But it's still an open question if the universe eventually will contract and collapse into a singularity and then a new big bang occurs in a cyclic event or if it's just going to end as an empty balloon. Too little is known about the whole picture of the universe to be able to determine the fate.

      In any case it's so far away in time that humankind isn't going to be around then - unless we are able

    • It's the death of all heat.

    • If the universe eventually dies than it implies that there was a beginning too. This would imply that there is something special about the few trillions of years between the beginning and end. If the universe and time are both infinite than I doubt that there is anything special about the few trillions of years this universe is in existence. If the universe dies than it should have died an infinite numbers of times before now. Our memory of any existence before now is lost at the time of death and rebir

      • IIRC, there are some theories where, out of the sea of nothing* that is a heat-dead universe, and on unfathomably long time scales (~10^45 years?)**, a new cosmic expansion event could happen randomly and birth a new universe. (Mumble mumble, quantum field fluctuations, symmetry breaking, mumble.)

        Thus, infinite universes could be born and die, on an infinite timeline. Even if this is true, it's still pretty special to exist.

        *Nothing except for virtual particle+antiparticle pairs popping in and out o
  • Plan now (Score:5, Funny)

    by ISoldat53 ( 977164 ) on Monday August 10, 2015 @07:43PM (#50289303)
    Don't put it off til the last minute.
    • The universe obviously needs more immigrant stars to produce energy for its retirement. Think of the future!
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This is going to screw up the Hurd development cycle.

  • Looks like as time approaches infinity, the sum = 0
  • by polemistes ( 739905 ) on Monday August 10, 2015 @07:49PM (#50289349) Homepage

    Still there are some ignorant deniers who don't accept the unanimous scientific proof that the heat death of the universe is human made.

  • Entropy

  • The final answer. Asimov, 1920 - 1992
  • Article: "The timeline for all this to come to pass is very long, hundreds of trillions of years." Or a "few". Sure. Whatever, I'll be gone either way.
    • Well it depends on how fast you are moving. Get up enough speed relative to the rest of the universe and for you the heat death of the universe could happen tomorrow...although that would require that every particle of your body to be accelerated to an energy about a trillion times higher than the LHC.
      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

        Do do this you don't need speed, you need acceleration, for example by orbiting close to a supermassive black hole and manage not to get ripped apart by tidal forces or vaporized by all the crap that usually surround black holes.
        Speed alone would make the time go slower for you, not faster.

  • Neil Young, the physicist
  • And what do you know: (from TFA)

    The decline in galaxies’ energy output coincides with the universe’s ever-increasing rate of expansion, which is due to a mysterious, anti-gravity force referred to as dark energy.

    So yeah, but no... it's just that you can't see as much of the newer stuff... ever, cos > speed of light. Not an entirely accurate headline but makes no difference i guess, the point is that cosmological expansion guarantees that everything we see will become less and less, that's before even bothering to consider start birth rate / death rate.

  • Everything has a beginning and end. No real surprise.

  • The Last Question (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dhavleak ( 912889 ) on Monday August 10, 2015 @09:42PM (#50290243)
    http://www.multivax.com/last_q... [multivax.com] There has never been a better time to read that story.
    • What a terribly shortsighted story.

      I always find it striking that in every damn SciFi universe, humans somehow always stay superrelevant. Not only does our little species still exist in a highly recognizable form, it even usually plays some central role in that universe (generally filled with other highly anthropomorphic entities with strikingly similar cultures).

      It is a ridiculous unfounded extrapolation of our time. Predicting human(like entitie)s in the far future is like predicting flying horse carriage

  • In a few billion years, we're fucked!

  • what about another big bang sized cosmic quantum fluctuation?

    ehhhh, forget it... it's probably really unlikely

  • Latest predictions are that the heat death of the universe will occur at 2^64-1 seconds after the Unix epoch.
  • Don't try to soften the blow... just tell us... how many months does the universe have left?

  • by hyades1 ( 1149581 ) <hyades1@hotmail.com> on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @03:49AM (#50291615)

    "Newer galaxies are simply putting out less energy than galaxies did in the past..."

    Just like them young kids today, by dammit! Always settin' around and playin' with them tabulets and why-fie-fo-fummery and smart phones smaller'n yer pecker after a dip in the stream.

    A dumb phone that just set there polite-like and rang 'til you answered or hit it with yer shoe was always good enough for me.

Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel

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