January 1, 2002
The Universe Might Last Forever, Astronomers Say, but Life
Might Not
(Page 2 of 3)
Dr. Krauss said, "The good news is that we can't prove that
this is the worst of all possible universes."
The Long Goodbye
It might seem strange or presumptuous for astronomers to try
to describe events all the way to the end of time when physicists are still
groping for a "theory of everything." But to Dr. Krauss, this is testimony
to the power of ordinary physics. "We can still put ultimate limits on things
without even knowing the ultimate theory," he said. "We can put limits on
things based on ordinary physics."
Dr. Dyson said his venture into eschatology was inspired partly
by a 1977 paper on the future of an ever expanding universe by Dr. J. N.
Islam, now at the University of Chittagong in Bangladesh, in The Quarterly
Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society. Dr. Dyson was also motivated, he
wrote in his paper, to provide a counterpoint to a famously dour statement
by Dr. Steven Weinberg, who wrote in his book "The First Three Minutes," "The
more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it also seems pointless."
Dr. Dyson wrote, "If Weinberg is speaking for the 20th century,
I prefer the 18th."
If the present trend of acceleration continues this is the
forecast:
In about two billion years Earth will become uninhabitable
as a gradually warming Sun produces a runaway greenhouse effect. In five billion
years the Sun will swell up and die, burning the Earth to a crisp in the
process. At about the same time the Milky Way will collide with its twin
the Andromeda galaxy, now about two million light- years away and closing
fast, spewing stars, gas and planets across intergalactic space.
Any civilization that managed to survive these events would
face a future of increasing ignorance and darkness as the accelerating cosmic
expansion rushes most of the universe away from us. "Our ability to know about
the universe will decrease with time," said Dr. Krauss. "The longer you wait,
the less you see, the opposite of what we always thought."
As he explains it, the disappearance of the universe is a
gradual process. The faster a galaxy flies away from us, the dimmer and dimmer
it will appear, as its light is "redshifted" to lower frequencies and energies,
the way a police siren sounds lower when it is receding. When it reaches the
speed of light, the galaxy will appear to "freeze," like a dancer caught in
midair in a photograph, in accordance to Einstein's theory of relativity,
and we will never see it get older, said Dr. Abraham Loeb, an astronomer at
Harvard. Rather it will simply seem dimmer. The farther away an object is
in the sky, he said, the younger it will appear as it fades out of sight.
"There is a finite amount of information we can collect from the universe,"
Dr. Loeb said.
About 150 billion years from now almost all of the galaxies
in the universe will be receding fast enough to be invisible from the Milky
Way. The exceptions will be galaxies that are gravitationally bound to the
cloud of galaxies, known as the Local Group, to which the Milky Way belongs.
Within this cloud, life would look much the same at first. There would be
galaxies in the sky. "When you look at the night the stars will still be there,"
said Dr. Krauss. "To the astronomer who wants to see beyond, the sky will
be sadly empty. Lovers won't be disturbed — scientists will be."
But about 100 trillion years from now, when the interstellar
gas and dust from which new stars condense is finally used up, new stars will
cease to be born. From that time on, the sky will grow darker and darker.
The galaxies themselves, astronomers say, will collapse in black holes within
about 1030 years.
But even a black hole is not forever, as Dr. Stephen Hawking,
the Cambridge University physicist and best-selling author, showed in path-breaking
calculations back in 1973. Applying the principles of quantum mechanics to
these dread-sounding objects, Dr. Hawking discovered that a black hole's surface,
its so-called event horizon, would fluctuate and exude energy in the form
of random bursts of particles and radiation, growing hotter and hotter until
the black hole eventually exploded and vanished.
Black holes the mass of the sun would take 1064
years to explode. For black holes the mass of a galaxy those fireworks
would light up space-time 1098 years from now.
Against the Fall of Night
Will there be anything or anyone around to see these quantum
fireworks?
Dr. Dyson argued in his 1979 paper that life and intelligence
could survive the desert of darkness and cold in a universe that was expanding
infinitely but ever more slowly by adopting ever slower and cooler forms of
existence. Intelligence, could reside, for example, in the pattern of electrically
charged dust grains in an interstellar cloud, a situation described in the
1957 science fiction novel "The Black Cloud," by the British astronomer Sir
Fred Hoyle, who died in August.
As an organism like the black cloud cooled, he argued, it
would think more slowly, but it would always metabolize energy even more slowly,
so its appetite would always be less than its output. In fact, Dr. Dyson
concluded, by making the amount of energy expended per thought smaller and
smaller the cloud could have an infinite number of thoughts while consuming
only a finite amount of energy.
But there was a hitch. Even just thinking requires energy
and generates heat, which is why computers have fans. Dr. Dyson suggested
that creatures would have to stop thinking and hibernate periodically to radiate
away their heat.
In an accelerating universe, however, there is an additional
source of heat that cannot be gotten rid of. The same calculations that predict
black holes should explode also predict that in an accelerating universe space
should be filled with so-called Hawking radiation. In effect, the horizon
— the farthest distance we can see — looks mathematically like the surface
of a black hole. The amount of this radiation is expected to be incredibly
small — corresponding to a fraction of a billionth of a billionth of a billionth
of a degree above absolute zero, but that is enough to doom sentient life.
"The Hawking radiation kills us because it gives a minimum
temperature below which you cannot cool anything," said Dr. Krauss. Once an
organism cools to that temperature, he explained, it would dissipate energy
at some fixed rate. "Since there is a finite total energy, this means a finite
lifetime."
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