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Universe heading towards 'heat death', say scientists | In a new research, scientists have determined that the universe appeared to be headed towards a state of 'heat death' when all of its stars, planets and other
matter would reach exactly the same temperature. According to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, the research was carried out by Dr Charley Lineweaver and
PhD student Chas Egan from the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics at
Australian National University (ANU). They measured the amount of the universe's
stored energy that has been lost - in a process known as entropy - since the Big
Bang. The result was about thirty times higher than other projections indicating
there was less left in the universe's "gas tank". "It's a bit like looking at
your gas gauge and saying, 'I thought I had half a gas tank, but I only have a
quarter of a tank'," said Dr Lineweaver. "But I can't tell you how many kilometres
you can go on that quarter of a tank yet," he added. Dr Lineweaver said that work
was under way to use the higher entropy figures to produce new estimations of
how long the universe would continue to be capable of supporting life. "One complication
was the lack of scientific consensus on the "maximum entropy state of the universe"
- how much energy was available and therefore how much could be lost," he said.
According to Dr Lineweaver, this issue aside, the universe appeared to be headed
towards a state of "heat death" when all of its stars, planets and other matter
would reach exactly the same temperature. "It's kind of like your coffee cup cooling
down ... when your coffee cup reaches the temperature of the room it is in, that's
equilibrium," he said. "The stars, which are burning hydrogen, are like the coffee
cup - they're hot and slowly cooling down," he explained. "The question is, when
will it end? ... And all you can say is we are closer to the heat death than we
anticipated," he added. Dr Lineweaver said this process was unfolding over an
immensely long period of time, and humans would face a momentous event within
our own solar system well before any ultimate unravelling of the universe. The
sun was expected to swell up to form a "red giant", making the earth uninhabitable,
in about five billion years before making the transition to a cooling white dwarf
star. |
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