If you’ve ever wondered about the ultimate fate of the
universe, Lawrence Krauss and Robert Scherrer have some good news - sort of.
found at Science
Daily from Vanderbilt
University April 26, 2007
In a paper published in the journal Physical Review D, the two physicists
show that matter as we know it will remain as the universe expands at an
ever-increasing clip. That is, the current status quo between matter and its
alter ego, radiation, will continue as the newly discovered force of dark energy
pushes the universe apart.
“Diamonds may actually be forever,” quips Krauss, professor of physics
and astronomy at Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) who is spending the year
at Vanderbilt. “One of the only positive things that has arisen from the
dark-energy dominated universe is that matter gets to beat radiation forever.”
This viewpoint runs contrary to conventional wisdom among cosmologists. Today,
there is more matter than radiation in the universe. But there were periods
during the early universe that were dominated by radiation due to particle
decays. The generally accepted view of the distant future has been that ordinary
matter particles – protons and neutrons in particular – will gradually decay
into radiation over trillions upon trillions of years, leaving a universe in
which radiation once again dominates over matter; a universe lacking the
material structures that are necessary for life.
Measurements of the recessional velocity, distance and age of stellar
explosions called supernovae provided the first direct evidence that the rate
at which the universe is expanding is increasing. (Credit: NASA)
It is only in the last decade that the existence of dark energy has been
recognized. Before that Krauss and collaborators argued for its existence based
on indirect evidence, but the first direct evidence came in 1998 when a major
survey of exploding stars, called supernovae, revealed that the universe is
apparently expanding at an increasing rate. Dark energy acts as a kind of
anti-gravity that drives the expansion of the universe at large scales. Because
it is associated with space itself, it is also called “vacuum energy.” A
number of follow-up observations have supported the conclusion that dark energy
accounts for about 70 percent of all the energy in the universe.
“The discovery of dark energy has changed everything, but it has changed
the view of the future more than the past. It is among the worst of all possible
futures for life,” says Krauss, who has spent the last few years exploring its
implications. In an eternally expanding universe there is at least a chance that
life could endure forever, but not in a universe dominated by vacuum energy,
Krauss and CWRU collaborator Glenn Starkman have concluded.
As the universe expands, the most distant objects recede at the highest
velocity. The faster that objects recede, the more that the light coming from
them is “red-shifted” to longer wavelengths. When their recessional velocity
reaches light speed, they disappear because they are traveling away faster than
the light that they emit. According to Krauss and Starkman, the process of
disappearance has already begun: There are objects that were visible when the
universe was half its present age that are invisible now. However, the process
won’t become really noticeable until the universe is about 100 billion years
old. By ten trillion years, nothing but our local cluster of galaxies will be
visible.
From the perspective of future civilizations, this process puts a finite
limit on the amount of information and energy that will be available to maintain
life. Assuming that consciousness is a physical phenomenon, this implies that
life itself cannot be eternal, Krauss and Starkman argue.
“Our current study doesn’t change the process, but it does make it a
little friendlier for matter and less friendly for radiation,” says Scherrer,
professor of physics at Vanderbilt.
In their paper, Krauss and Scherrer analyzed all the ways that ordinary
matter and dark matter could decay into radiation. (Dark matter is different
from dark energy. It is an unknown form of matter that astronomers have only
been able to detect by its gravitational effect on the ordinary matter in nearby
galaxies. At this point, the physicists have no idea whether it is stable or
will ultimately decay like ordinary matter.) Given known constraints on these
various decay processes, the two show that none of them can produce radiation
densities that exceed the density of the remaining matter. This is
counter-intuitive because, when matter turns into energy, it does so according
to Einstein’s equation, E=mc2, and produces copious amounts of energy.
“The surprising thing is that radiation disappears as fast as it is created
in a universe with dark energy,” says Krauss.
The reason for radiation’s vanishing act involves the expansion of space.
Expanding space diminishes the density of radiant energy in two ways. The first
is by increasing the separation between individual photons. The second is by
reducing the amount of energy carried by individual photons. A photon’s energy
is contained entirely in its electromagnetic field. The shorter its wavelength
and the higher its frequency, the more energy it contains. As space itself
expands, the wavelengths of all the photons within it lengthen and their
frequency drops. This means that the amount energy that individual photons
contain also decreases. Taken together, these two effects dramatically reduce
the energy density of radiation.
Protons and neutrons, by contrast, only suffer from the separation effect.
Most of the energy that they carry is bound up in their mass and is not affected
by spatial expansion. In an accelerating universe, that is enough of an
advantage to maintain matter’s dominance - forever.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by
Vanderbilt University.