http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/pr/02/universe925.html

The recent discovery that the universe is expanding at an ever-increasing
rate has led many astronomers to forecast a dark and lonely future for our
galaxy. According to some predictions, the rapidly accelerating universe
will cause all galaxies to run away from each other until they are no longer
visible. In this widely accepted scenario, our own Milky Way will become an
isolated island adrift in a sea of totally black space 150 billion years
from now.

But two new studies by Stanford University cosmologists suggest that it may
be time to rethink this popular view of a "runaway universe." Instead of
expanding exponentially, our cosmos may be in danger of collapsing in a
"mere" 10 to 20 billion years, according to the Stanford team.

"The standard vision at the moment is that the universe is speeding up,"
said physics Professor Andrei Linde, "so we were surprised to find that a
collapse could happen within such a short amount of time."

Linde and his wife, Renata Kallosh -- also a professor of physics at
Stanford -- have authored two companion studies that raise the possibility
of a cosmic "big crunch." Both papers are available on the physics research
website, www.arXiv.org.

"We tried our best to come up with a good theory that explains the
acceleration of the universe, but ours is just a model," Linde noted. "It's
just part of the answer."

If the Linde-Kallosh model is correct, then the universe, which appears to
be accelerating now, will begin to slow down and contract.

"The universe may be doomed to collapse and disappear," Linde said.
"Everything we see now, and at a much larger distance that we cannot see,
will collapse into a point smaller than a proton. Locally, it will be the
same as if you were inside a black hole. You will just discontinue your
existence."



Einstein's "blunder"

The fate of the cosmos has been hotly debated for decades.

In the early 20th century, Albert Einstein, along with most physicists,
believed that the universe was static -- even though the equations he
developed for his general theory of relativity in 1917 suggested that space
itself was either contracting or expanding.

To ensure that his new theory was consistent with nature, Einstein invented
the "cosmological constant": an arbitrary mathematical term he inserted into
his equations to guarantee a static universe -- at least on paper. To
Einstein, the cosmological constant may have represented some kind of
invisible energy that exists in the vacuum of empty space -- a force strong
enough to repel the gravitational force exerted by matter. Without this
mysterious vacuum energy opposing gravity, the universe eventually would
crash in on itself, according to general relativity theory.

But observations by astronomer Edwin Hubble and others in the 1920s proved
that distant galaxies are not stationary but are, in fact, moving away from
one another. Since the universe was expanding, Einstein no longer needed an
antigravity factor in his equations, so he rejected the cosmological
constant as irrelevant.

"First Einstein introduced the cosmological constant in his equations, then
he said that this was the biggest blunder of his life," Linde observed. "But
I recently heard that, apparently, he still liked the idea and discussed it
many years later -- and continued writing equations that included it."



Dark energy

Fast-forward to 1998, when two independent teams of astronomers discovered
that not only is the universe expanding, it is doing so at an ever-faster
pace. Their findings were based on observations of supernovae -- exploding
stars that emit extraordinarily bright light.

A supernova is a rare event, but new telescopes equipped with sophisticated
electronic sensors allowed the research teams to track dozens of stellar
explosions in the sky. What they saw astonished the world of astronomy: The
supernovae, it turned out, actually were speeding up at a rate that outpaced
the predicted gravitational pull of matter.

What force could be strong enough to overcome gravity and cause the universe
to accelerate? Perhaps Einstein was right all along -- maybe there is some
kind of vacuum energy in space. Einstein called it the cosmological
constant, and 80 years later, astronomers would give this invisible force a
new name -- dark energy.

"The supernova experiments four years ago confirmed a simple picture of the
universe where approximately 30 percent of it is made of matter and 70
percent is made of dark energy -- whatever it is," Linde observed.

Overnight, a concept that Einstein had rejected was now considered the
dominant force in the universe.

"The cosmological constant remains one of the biggest mysteries of modern
physics," Linde pointed out.



Negative energy

Current predictions that dark energy will continue to overwhelm gravity and
produce a runaway universe are based on the assumption that the total
density of dark energy in the universe is greater than zero and will remain
so forever.

This seems obvious at first glance, since logic dictates that the density of
dark energy has to be a positive number. After all, how could the universe
be filled with "negative energy"?

But in the strange world of quantum physics and elementary particle theory,
everyday logic doesn't always apply.

"During the last year, physicists came to the realization that it is very
difficult to understand the origin of positive dark energy in the most
advanced versions of elementary particle theory -- such as string theory and
extended supergravity," Linde said.

"We have found that some of the best attempts to describe dark energy
predict that it will gradually become negative, which will cause the
universe to become unstable, then collapse," he added. "People who studied
general relativity many years ago were aware of this, but to them, this was
an academic possibility. It was weird to think about negative vacuum energy
seriously. Now we have some reasons to believe it."

The Linde-Kallosh model produced another surprising result: The cosmos will
collapse in 10 to 20 billion years -- a timeframe comparable with the age of
the universe, which is estimated to be about 14 billion years old.

"This was really strange," Linde recalled. "Physicists have known that dark
energy could become negative and the universe could collapse sometime in the
very distant future, perhaps in a trillion years, but now we see that we
might be, not in the beginning, but in the middle of the life cycle of our
universe."

The good news, wrote Linde and Kallosh, is that "we still have a lot of time
to find out whether this is going to happen."



Cosmic bubbles

Linde is quick to acknowledge that the collapsing universe scenario is not
the final word on the fate of the cosmos.

"Astronomy is a science once known for its continuous errors," he quipped.
"There was even a joke: 'Astrophysicists are always in error but never in
doubt.' We are just in the very beginning of our investigation of this
issue, and it would be incorrect to interpret our results as a reliable
doomsday prediction. In any case, our model teaches us an interesting
lesson: Even the most abstract theories of elementary particles may end up
having great importance in helping us understand the fate of the universe
and the fate of humanity."

Direct observation of space with state-of-the-art telescopes, satellites and
other instruments will answer many unresolved questions, he added. "We're
entering the era of precision cosmology, where we really can get a lot of
data, and these data become more precise. Perhaps 10 years, 20 years, 30
years, I don't know, but this is the timescale in which we will get a map of
the universe with all its observable parts. So things that were a matter of
speculation will gradually become better and better established."

Linde helped pioneer inflationary cosmology -- the theory that the universe
began not with a fiery big bang but with an extraordinarily rapid expansion
(inflation) of space in a vacuum-like state. According to inflationary
theory, what we call the universe is just a minute fraction of a much larger
cosmos.

"The universe actually looks, not like a bubble, but like a bubble producing
new bubbles," Linde explained. "We live in a tiny part of one bubble, and we
look around and say, 'This is our universe.' "

If our bubble collapses into a point, a new bubble is likely to inflate
somewhere else -- possibly giving rise to an entirely new form of life,
Linde said.

"Our part of the universe may die, but the universe as a whole, in a sense,
is immortal -- it just changes its properties," he concluded. "People want
to understand their place in the universe, how it was created and how it all
will end -- if at all. That is something that I would be happy to know the
answer to and would pay my taxpayer money for. After all, it was never easy
to look into the future, but it is possible to do so, and we should not miss
our chance."

Graduate student Sergey Prokushkin and Marina Shmakova, a research associate
at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, also contributed to the studies.
Research was supported with grants from the National Science Foundation, the
Templeton Foundation, the U.S. Department of Energy and the Stanford
Graduate Fellowships program.





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Stars Go Crash Maru

rob


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