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/sci/ - Science & Math


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11995411 No.11995411 [Reply] [Original]

According to science, when is the end of the universe?

>> No.11995444

>>11995411
When you die. Its quite clear your Universe is over when you die.
Christ on the other hand has his own scheduled time but you can't know when

>> No.11995468

>>11995411
around googel years

>> No.11995703

Basically once all the stars have become black holes, and those black holes have diminished... the universe will be just an empty vacuum...

>> No.11995732

>>11995444
Wow youre such a dense faggot with a small mind, do us a favor and kill yourself

>> No.11995737

>>11995732
>asks question
>gets the only certain answer
>doesn't like the answer
Why ask

>> No.11995740

Long before I'm done screwing your mother.

>> No.11995745

>>11995411
I'll speak on your level, Computer Science Major. The universe will end in INF seconds.

>> No.11995895

>>11995411
heat death

>> No.11995923

Heat death.

When there is no free energy left in the universe and all particles have decayed, the concept of time loses its meaning and it'll be the end of the universe.

>> No.11995983

>>11995411
hundred trillion years or so when the universe reaches energetic uniformity

>> No.11996407

The following is a reply to a thread that archived before I could post it.
It is still relevant to this thread, OP.

>>11993671
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Rip
You can't disprove this theory yet. That's my point.

The article provided referenced "22 Billion years", which is probably what I meant to say when I mentioned 5 billion, but my understanding is that you could slightly change the value for w= and it could very well be only 5 billion years.

We just don't know.
I kind of hope we never know :^)

>> No.11996418

>>11995411
The universe is most likely cyclic, endlessly beginning and ending.

>> No.11996419

>>11995895
>OP asks when
>you answer how

>> No.11996432

Heat death is a pop sci meme and will never happen. The entropic capacity of the universe is growing faster than the entropy itself, thanks to expansion.

>> No.11996474

>>11995411
according to science we don't know exactly but heat death of the universe is around ((10^10)^10)^56 years from know

>> No.11996570

>>11995983
>>11996474
difference between these two is hilarious

>> No.11996573

>>11995411
Scientists say aerosols are accelerating heat death. Expect universal heat death by 2025.

>> No.11996584

>>11996474
>((10^10)^10)^56
look so similar to this that it can't be a coincidence:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_death_of_the_universe#cite_ref-15

((10^10)^10)^56 << 10^10^10^56
and "Another universe could possibly be created" is waaaay after "reaching heat death".
which seems to happen around 10^106
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_death_of_the_universe#cite_ref-14

>> No.11996639

>>11995411

We dont know, we dont even know how the universe will end in the first place.