• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The Universe Might End Sooner Than We Thought – But Don’t Worry, We’ve Still Got 33 Billion Years

July 25, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

The universe began in an event we call the Big Bang around 13.8 billion years ago. Humanity has been able to understand a lot of what has happened since and where the universe is going, but we do not know exactly how it is going to end. A new study suggests that the cosmos might bow out a lot sooner than many others had anticipated: in just 33 billion years.

It all boils down to a mysterious component of the universe called dark energy. This hypothetical substance is responsible for the current accelerated expansion of the cosmos, but depending on its true nature, it might lead to a dramatically different future for everything in the universe.

The universe might expand forever and get colder and colder, eventually reaching heat death. If this scenario is correct, then the universe is going to be around for an enormous number of years (although maybe not as many as we originally thought). But what if the universe doesn’t expand forever? Well, it might then collapse back onto itself in the Big Crunch.

This idea has been around for a long while, but the discovery of the accelerated expansion of the universe has pushed many to consider it less likely to happen. Originally, the Big Crunch scenario saw the universe expanding like ours. After many billions of years, it slows down, until things start coming back together again. Now the universe looks like it is filled with dark energy, acting as a cosmological constant of space-time. This means that the more space-time there is, the more dark energy there is. In that scenario, you never slow down the universe.

We do not know what dark energy is. Most observations find it consistent with the cosmological constant within a certain margin of error, but it might not be. Recently, some observational evidence suggested that it is possible for dark energy to change. If it’s not a constant, things might be different in the future.

A scenario for the nature of this different dark energy was evaluated in a new paper that is currently awaiting peer review. Its authors find its nature to be mixed: part cosmological constant and part the energy of axions, a possible particle that makes up the equally mysterious and hypothetical dark matter. The interesting part is that their model of the cosmological constant is negative. So, despite the current accelerated expansion, the universe will eventually reverse its course.

According to their model, the universe will end in 33.3 billion years in the future, so we have a fair time to go even before experiencing the midpoint of this hypothetical scenario.

There are other ways for the universe to end. Dark energy might be greater than the cosmological constant and rip space-time apart (Big Rip), the Big Bang and Big Crunch would be components of a never-ending repeating cycle (Big Bounce), and my personal favorite, the false vacuum decay, where a random quantum effect could bring back the end of everything without warning.

The paper, which is yet to be peer-reviewed, is posted to arXiv.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Audi launches its newest EV, the 2022 Q4 e-tron SUV
  2. Dinosaur Prints Found Under Restaurant Table Confirmed As 100 Million Years Old
  3. Archax: Japanese Engineers Make Transformer Robot That Actually Works
  4. How Do We Know There Is Anything Beyond The Observable Universe?

Source Link: The Universe Might End Sooner Than We Thought – But Don’t Worry, We’ve Still Got 33 Billion Years

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • First-Ever Human Case Of H5N5 Bird Flu Results In Death Of Washington State Resident
  • This Region Of The US Was Riddled With “Forever Chemicals.” They Just Discovered Why.
  • There Is Something “Very Wrong” With Our Understanding Of The Universe, Telescope Final Data Confirms
  • An Ethiopian Shield Volcano Has Just Erupted, For The First Time In Thousands Of Years
  • The Quietest Place On Earth Has An Ambient Sound Level Of Minus 24.9 Decibels
  • Physicists Say The Entire Universe Might Only Need One Constant – Time
  • Does Fluoride In Drinking Water Impact Brain Power? A Huge 40-Year Study Weighs In
  • Hunting High And Low Helps Four Wild Cat Species Coexist In Guatemala’s Rainforests
  • World’s Oldest Pygmy Hippo, Hannah Shirley, Celebrates 52nd Birthday With “Hungry Hungry Hippos”-Themed Party
  • What Is Lüften? The Age-Old German Tradition That’s Backed By Science
  • People Are Just Now Learning The Difference Between Plants And Weeds
  • “Dancing” Turtles Feel Magnetism Through Crystals Of Magnetite, Helping Them Navigate
  • Social Frailty Is A Strong Predictor Of Dementia, But Two Ingredients Can “Put The Brakes On Cognitive Decline”
  • Heard About “Subclade K” Flu? We Explore What It Is, And Whether You Should Worry
  • Why Did Prehistoric Mummies From The Atacama Desert Have Such Small Brains?
  • What Would Happen If A Tiny Primordial Black Hole Passed Through Your Body?
  • “Far From A Pop-Science Relic”: Why “6 Degrees Of Separation” Rules The Modern World
  • IFLScience We Have Questions: Can Sheep Livers Predict The Future?
  • The Cavendish Experiment: In 1797, Henry Cavendish Used Two Small Metal Spheres To Weigh The Entire Earth
  • People Are Only Now Learning Where The Titanic Actually Sank
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version