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Perspectives takes up where the Timeline leaves off, offering more risky speculation and outright fiction about what the future may bring, than is suitable in the Timeline. Perspectives helps illustrate some of the possibilities implied by the Timeline, as well as how certain select personalities of various periods might perceive (and exploit or respond to) their circumstances. Recently Perspectives was expanded to include facts and speculation about mankind's past, in addition to its future. Virtually all credible historians and archaeologists agree that there's many puzzles and mysteries regarding our past that have yet to be resolved.
| 1990-2000 AD | 2001 AD-Present | 2003-2008 | 2009-2017 | 2018-2025 | 2026-2049 | 2050-2081 | 2082-2183 | 2184-2272 | 2273-2350 | 2351-2600 |
Back to the Table of Contents of the Signposts Timeline
-- Nature blamed for melting ice By Alex Kirby; BBC News | Sci/Tech; October 7, 1999; http://www.bbc.co.uk/ Another source states that if ALL the ice in Antarctica melted, global sea levels would rise 228 feet. --"Antarctic Ice Melt May Come In Next Generation" By Andy Soloman, Reuters/Yahoo, 1-27-99 The U.S. Geological Survey has said global sea level rose roughly 4 inches during the 20th century. And that in the event all the glaciers presently on Earth melted, sea levels would rise by 260 feet. -- Antarctic ice shelves said to be breaking up faster than expected; Antarctica - Part 3, citing Maggie Fox and Reuters (no datestamp was given) |
Signposts Perspectives 6,001 AD and Beyond Contents
The star Eta Carinae is one of the largest and most powerful stars known in the universe, some 100times the size and five times the power of our Sun. It first caught our attention inthe 1840s with a massive flaring in brightness. Today it seems to be acting in aworrisome and unpredictable fashion, perhaps leading to a hypernova explosionsometime in the next 10,000 years. -- "Astronomers perplexed by star's weird behavior", Associated Press/CNN, foundon or about 6-7-99 |
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Our first colonization missions to two close stars might require 100 years, given present knowledge and expectations of propulsion technologies. Assuming an average delay of 400 years before a newly formed colony launched its own two fresh colonization missions further into space, humanity could command every solar system inside a 400 lightyear diameter sphere centered on Earth just 10,000 years after the first mission. The whole galaxy would require less than 4 million years. -- Scientific American: COLONIZATION OF THE GALAXY: July 2000 |
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The reason no one receives the message is that humanity took great precautions to insure that the message wouldn't be received. Though the original stated target was the globular cluster Hercules, Messier 13, some 25,000 lightyears from Earth, the human senders in 1974 well knew that natural galactic rotation would move the cluster to another location entirely by the time the message arrived. Thus, nothing but empty space greets the message signal at its appointed rendezvous.
-- First Message To ETs Sent Twenty-Five Years Ago By Bill Steele, 15-Nov-1999, http://www.unisci.com |
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The costs alone would seem to make a single century of terraforming prohibitively expensive. So 200-300 years at minimum would seem more practical from an economic point of view. Add in the scientific and environmental concerns touched upon above, and the process might be extended still further. However, we must keep in mind the likely fast pace of technological innovation over this same period, which would be greatly reducing related costs while also showing us ways to reduce the negative impacts of terraforming in regards to science and the environment. Then there's the large increase in world population and competition during this same period to consider, which might increase humanity's desire to explore and colonize other worlds, thereby increasing public support for Mars terraforming, among other things.
-- Predictions for the new millennium By LANCE GAY, October 25, 1999, Nando Media/Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.nandotimes.com |
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-- "NOT WITH A BANG BUT A WHIMPER" From Science Frontiers Digest of Scientific Anomalies #107, SEP-OCT 1996 by William R. Corliss, citing Ray Jayawardhana; "Earth Menaced by Superbubble," New Scientist, p. 15, June 22, 1996 Around 2015 the Voyager 1 and 2 space probes will have to pass through several shock waves and an enormous "wall" about 50 au thick in space made up of somewhat dense hydrogen gas, according to Gary P. Zank, a theoretical astrophysicist at Bartol Research Institute, University of Delaware [Astronomical Units; one au is equal to the distance between the Earth the Sun; about 150 million km]. The wall is actually a boundary layer between our solar system's heliosphere and the rest of space. Our sun's solar wind creates a bullet-shaped protective bubble about the solar system called the heliosphere, which (among other things) helps make the climate on Earth conducive to life. However, our heliosphere can shrink in size and effectiveness when we pass into a region of denser gas in space (or impact a gas cloud). For some time now (5 million years) we've enjoyed a fairly big heliosphere because we were traveling though a very low density region of space, where our heliosphere could easily push off the scant hydrogen gas of the void. However, that's going to change sometime in the future-- possibly without warning. We could hit a cosmic cloud at least a hundred times denser than our present space anytime. Such an event could expose us to damaging cosmic radiation and substantial climate changes, as it essentially sweeps away our protective heliosphere. One almost certain impact could come within 50,000 years via a cloud from the Aquila Rift. There's also the Local Fluff, or random cloud clusters much nearer to our present location than the Aquila Rift monster-- and almost impossible to detect for reasons of warning or analysis of possible impact consequences before-the-fact, due to our instrumentation not yet being sufficiently sensitive for such things. -- "UD Space News: Cosmic Cloud Could Burst Earth's 'Breathing Bubble,' New Bartol Computer Simulation Shows", 28 May 1998, University of Delaware |
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If we're lucky, we won't see a major asteroid impact on Earth until around 100,000 AD. But if we're unlucky, we could be struck just one year from now. It's now estimated that only half as many objects ranging from 1 to 10 km in diameter possess orbits bringing them near to the Earth, as were previously thought. 700 is the latest estimate. A 10 km object (such as may have killed the dinosaurs) could cause worldwide extinctions and threaten the existence of humanity itself. A 1 km object's damage would at least be limited to the region impacted, under many circumstances. The 1908 Tunguska impact may have involved an object smaller than 1 km. By around 2015 scientists should have mapped out 90% of the threatening asteroids in the void (comets are another story). It is expected that the Earth will be struck by an object somewhat smaller than 1 km perhaps every 10,000 years. By a 10 km object, once every 100 million years. -- No escaping asteroids Dr David Whitehouse, Sci/Tech BBC News, 12 January, 2000, http://www.bbc.co.uk |
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-- Peculiar Bulges Detected on Giant Star in Orion by MALCOLM W. BROWNEApril 14, 1998, the New York Times |
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The Copernican Principle is simple: that Earth and humanity represent nothing special in the Universe.Darwinism is a similar idea applied to biological lifeforms. Using these as guides, one scientist has estimated that the lifespan of the human race is very likely to be somewhere between 200,000 and eight million years. He also projects that we probably won't colonize the galaxy simply because lifeforms rarely fulfill their ultimate potential. -- "ALREADY, NOW, WE ARE FORGOTTEN ON THOSE STELLAR SHORES" From Science Frontiers Digest of Scientific Anomalies #88, JUL-AUG 1993 by William R. Corliss, citing J. Richard Gott; "Implications of the Copernican Principle for Our Future Prospects." Nature, 363:315, 1993, with article title apparently taken from a Stephen Spender poem |
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Star faring civilizations may be classified according to the scale of energies they command, in a ranking termed as Karadashev levels or types I, II, and III. A type I civilization is able to utilize the power output of an entire planet. A type II, an entire star, type III, an entire galaxy. By 1,000,000 AD humanity will reach Karadashev Type III civilization status. -- pages 291 and 312, The Millennial Project by Marshall Savage; Little, Brown, and Company, 1992, 1994 |
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-- Pioneer 10 gets new lease on life in outer solar system By Richard Stenger, CNN Interactive, March 2, 2000 |
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Our first colonization missions to two close stars might require 100 years, given present knowledge and expectations of propulsion technologies. Assuming an average delay of 400 years before a newly formed colony launched its own two fresh colonization missions further into space, humanity could command every solar system inside a 400 lightyear diameter sphere centered on Earth just 10,000 years after the first mission. The whole galaxy would require less than 4 million years. -- Scientific American: COLONIZATION OF THE GALAXY: July 2000 |
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-- The Anomaly Pages Archive 1 |
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-- Common questions: Gondwana and continental drift; FAQ - Gondwana, Monash University Earth Sciences ¥ Monash Science Centre ¥ Ziggurat Creative & Technical Publishing, found on or about 7-8-2000 |
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Assuming humanity ends abruptly sometime soon, around 100 million AD some fossilized human skeletons may still exist, primarily due to our practice of burying our dead, and there being so many of us on Earth before our extinction. Unfortunately, the best preservation may require an underwater environment-- something which will be an unlikely place of entombment for a significant number of people, fossil-wise. In dryland settings, encasement in amber worked for some insects, but not for others (intestinal bacteria often consume all but the outer layer of an amber-trapped insect). Freezing, mummification, or submergence in a bog can offer lengthy periods of preservation-- but nowhere near the 100 million year range. Because environmental conditions almost certainly will change enough to disrupt the preservation process over such a lengthy time-- unless such relics enjoy some sort of artificial arrangements in addition to the others listed. Some concrete and steel portions of our buildings constructed underground, such as foundations, sewers, subways, and the like, may still exist in somewhat identifiable form. Cables and pipelines may also be preserved in protected underground locations. Some remnants of coastal cities may be somewhat preserved due to sinking into the ocean early on, or being drowned by rising sea waters. But such inundation would only be preservative if it happened quickly; otherwise wave action and storms would destroy the relics before they could be saved for posterity by natural forces. However, growing sedimentary pressures above may crush or flatten many works, while some geochemical and biochemical forces may corrode the relics completely or partially away, while others slowly cover up or distort artifacts by way of accretive processes. Bricks and concrete may survive relatively well underground. Glass fragments may lose their transparency but still continue to exist. Many plastics may turn black and sooty, but still present good representations of their original forms. Pollution in the biosphere will be a long lasting legacy. Metals in soil and the bottoms of oceans and other bodies of water will remain for a long time to come. -- Buried treasure by Jan Zalasiewicz, From New Scientist, 27 June 1998; a supplement to the above ("Flesh and blood") seems to have been written by Kim Freedman |
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If humanity managed to survive without major setbacks past around 2650 AD or so, then some form of the civilization may have continued on, even up to today. Of course, such a civilization likely would be unrecognizable to its ancestors. It might perhaps be wholly machines-- a race of robots.
On the other hand, if humanity injured itself badly enough before 2650 AD, or some external force like a comet impact did something similar, human civilization may have been set back severely at the time, perhaps never to fully recover. Or a whole new civilization might have arisen over thousands or tens of thousands of years, based upon largely different technologies than the first (due to resources like easily accessible minerals and fossil fuels having been depleted by the previous generations). The necessity to invent new technologies not dependent upon the same elements prior civilization used (and the greater possible difficulties therein) may have even delayed the rise of the second civilization by a million years or more. This new human civilization might have little or no idea of the first-- legends of entities like 21st century USAmerica, Russia, and China might be their own versions of Atlantis. If this were so, that would be unfortunate, as it might lead to them repeating the mistakes of their forebears, to begin a new cycle of catastrophe and regeneration. Eventually of course humanity might not recover from one of these cycles, going extinct instead.
Indeed, the probabilities seem to be that humanity suffered practical extinction as early as the 21st century, or no later than 2700 AD-- if they went the way of most other potential star faring civilizations. And in the wake of that extinction, a new species may have arisen to claim the title of dominance over the planet. Perhaps one of humanity's primate cousins did so-- a species of monkey or ape. Or maybe bears or elephants. If no land species claimed the crown over the next 10-30 million years, an aquatic species (such as dolphins or squid) may have done so.
150 million years would be enough time for 25 different non-human civilizations to come and go, if they required only roughly the same 6 million years or so humanity did to arise from its ape forebears. Or, if the succession was of slight variations of human beings, requiring maybe one million years between them for evolutionary changes, there could be up to 150 different human variant civilizations rise and fall over the same period. Each separated from the other by hundreds of thousands of years in terms of artifacts and relics. The evolutionary changes might involve growing resistant to high levels of radiation from nuclear war, or to various biological weapons or toxic pollutants loosed by previous generations. Or they might entail shrinking in size due to chronic food shortages. Or using a combination of technology and natural evolution to adapt to living undersea, due to increased radiation from nuclear wars or distant star explosions afflicting the Earth's surface. Many sorts of changes could be forced upon mutated human beings, depending on what humanity itself does during this time, and what the cosmos itself decides to throw our way.
In any or all these cases, if any civilization whatsoever exists today on Earth, it may be meeting its own end now, for a variety of reasons-- primarily perhaps because of the cosmic craps game turning up a most unfortunate roll. A massive comet or asteroid impact may do them in. A super volcanic eruption may ruin the planet. The Sun may turn rogue much earlier than anyone expects, or at least unleash a horrific solar flare which fries the Earth. An unanticipated black hole or dead star may pass near the solar system, disturbing planetary orbits and ruining the Earth in that fashion (by flinging it off into interstellar space or driving it into the Sun, or merely nudging it into a hotter or colder orbit than it enjoyed before; i.e., Earth may suffer a fate similar to what Mars or Venus endured much earlier).
By this late date there's also a much greater chance than before of advanced alien intruders discovering Earth and willfully wiping out the life they find there.
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-- BBC News | SCI/TECH | A 10 billion billion billion megaton bomb in space By Dr David Whitehouse , 21 July, 2000 |
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After 500,000,000 AD, 95% of all Earth plants (including trees and most human food crops) begin to die out. This will eventually leave only plants derived from tropical grasses such as sugar cane and corn still alive. However, even these may die off relatively quickly for other reasons, since they alone will be unable to sustain the Earth's biosphere to continue the growing conditions to which they are accustomed. Earth is fast becoming a desert world despite still possessing substantial oceans.
-- Earth's oceans destined to leave in billion years, EurekAlert!, 20 FEBRUARY 2000,Contact: A'ndrea Elyse Messeraem1@psu.edu814-865-9481Penn State |
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-- explorezone.com NEWS: A tourist's guide to the Milky Way ByRobert Roy Britt, explorezone.com . 01.05.00, http://www.space.com/ |
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-- Earth's oceans destined to leave in billion years, EurekAlert!, 20 FEBRUARY 2000,Contact: A'ndrea Elyse Messeraem1@psu.edu814-865-9481Penn State |
However, a substantial quantity of water remains hidden deep within the Earth at this time, and for quite some time to come. It's very plausible that any civilized elements still living on Earth now will be exploiting this underground water supply. It may be that virtually all higher lifeforms on Earth are retreating to subterranean regions of the planet to live.
Assuming a more or less steady rate of technological progress for at least some elements of Earth society since 2000 AD, certain parts of any Earth-bound civilization existing today might care little about the tremendous decline in Earth habitability over the past billion years-- for they are well protected by their technology.
-- TWO REALLY DEEP OCEANS from Science Frontiers Digest of Scientific Anomalies #96, NOV-DEC 1994 by William R. Corliss, citing Carl Zimmer; "The Ocean Within," Discover, 15:20, October 1994, and Martin Redfern; "Lost Ocean Found Deep in the Earth," New Scientist, p. 16, September 3, 1994 Between 750 million BC and 2,000 AD the Earth's surface sea level will have dropped some 1,968 feet due to loss of water to subterranean regions.. -- "The world's oceans seem to be draining away" by Peter Hadfield, Tokyo, New Scientist issue 11th September 99, http://www.newscientist.com, 8 SEPTEMBER 1999, EurekAlert! |
A billion years from now, when the Sun begins in its old age to threaten the existence of life on Earth (with a 10% plus increase in luminosity), humanity might move the Earth further out from its solar companion to protect the planet and its lifeforms. Such a change in Earth's orbit might be effected with judicious use of a large (100 km) asteroid. The same technique could also be used to make other rearrangements of this or other solar systems. The asteroid would be engineered into a path taking it close to both Earth and Jupiter. Several passes later Earth will have been successfully nudged into an orbit more distant from the Sun. The asteroid passage near Earth might occur once every 6000 years, if the orbital change was calculated to gradually be made in synchrony with the Sun's brightening. The Sun is expected to continue to increase in brightness beyond the next billion years; to increase by 40% over today by three billion years from now. Such an increase might turn an unmoved/unprotected Earth into something like 20th century Venus. Some believe such manipulation of planetary orbits would be an easier and more cost-effective manner of increasing the inhabitable real estate in the Solar system than terraforming Mars. -- Planet Earth on the move By Dr David Whitehouse, 5 February, 2001, BBC News Online |
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-- End of the galaxy (but don't hold your breath) BY MICHAEL HANLON SCIENCE EDITOR, 12 January, 2000, Express Newspapers |
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Due to more localized catastrophes by this time, humanity or its progeny are likely to be extinct, living altogether elsewhere, or at least moved off Earth onto planets further out from the Sun within the local system.
-- End of the galaxy (but don't hold your breath) BY MICHAEL HANLON SCIENCE EDITOR, 12 January, 2000, Express Newspapers -- explorezone.com NEWS: A tourist's guide to the Milky Way ByRobert Roy Britt, explorezone.com . 01.05.00, http://www.space.com/ Another source puts the closing speed between galaxies presently at 500,000 km an hour. Andromeda was about 2.2 million lightyears from our galaxy in 2000 AD. -- Astrophysicist Maps Out Our New Galaxy, 4/18/2000, http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/04/000417171734.htm, Source: University Of Toronto (http://www.utoronto.ca), Contact: Janet Wong , News Services Officer, Phone: (416) 978-6974; Email: jf.wong@utoronto.ca, CONTACT: Prof. John Dubinski, U of T Department of Astronomy, (416) 978-8494, dubinski@cita.utoronto.ca |
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Beyond this point it begins to redden and swell, eventually growing large enough to swallow Mercury. Around this time Venus loses its atmosphere, and its surface is roasted. Earth will not be far behind, as the Sun continues to swell.
Around 4,500,000,000 AD, when the Sun is swelling into a red giant, it may grow so large that the atmosphere and outer layers of the Earth are peeled away, leaving behind only the nickel and iron core (in an even worse scenario the Sun swallows the Earth completely). -- The Earthcould be in foran electrifying time By Hazel Muir, From New Scientist, 1 August 1998 -- Earth's oceans destined to leave in billion years, EurekAlert!, 20 FEBRUARY 2000,Contact: A'ndrea Elyse Messeraem1@psu.edu814-865-9481Penn State |
There's the possibility that by this time a close encounter between an alien star and Earth's solar system has disturbed the orbit of Jupiter, perhaps slingshotting Earth out of the system and into interstellar space, to become a rogue planet. This might save Earth from the worst charring-- replacing burning with death by freezing.
-- Earth's long-term future is grim, scientists say By PAUL RECER, Nando Media/Associated Press, February 20, 2000, http://www.nandotimes.com |
Up through around 3,500,000,000 AD there's a 1 in 100,000 chance of a passing star system disrupting Jupiter's orbit and flinging the Earth either into the Sun or outwards into interstellar space.
Thrown into space, the oceans would require about a million years to freeze solid. Hydrothermal vents on the sea floor would sustain some life from the ongoing radioactive decay within the Earth.
Solar system's ultimate fate, 20 FEBRUARY 2000, EurekAlert! Contact: Sally Pobojewskipobo@umich.edu734-647-1844University of Michigan4-2-99 Newz&Viewz: The recent flood of new data on distant solar systems is conflicting with established ideas for how systems form and what 'average' system patterns might beRather than finding a nice and neat bunch of alien star systems basically similar to our own, instead we're discovering chaos incarnate. Bizzarre warped mutations of our system abound.Apparently many systems suffer internal mass imbalances or disturbances from large masses passing nearby which prevent them from assuming or maintaining arrangements like our own system enjoys. For instance, lots of the alien planets suffer scorching orbits nearer their host stars than our own Mercury, while others endure elliptical orbits similar to our own comets which mean part of the time they're baked in the vicinity of their home star and the rest of the time they're frozen in the outer reaches of their system (some worlds may even be thrown out of their home systems entirely by inopportune gravitic slingshot effects). Lots of the planetary bodies we've detected so far appear to be even larger than our own Jupiter (up to eleven times!), which poses a whole new set of challenges for order and potential biosphere development in a planetary system. Jupiter-like worlds in long period cometary-like orbits could spell doom for smaller planets in a system which otherwise held the potential for developing biospheres. How? Whenever the immense Jupiter peer came careening into the inner system its mass would perturb the orbits of all the other planets, possibly even changing their orbits, throwing them out of the system entirely, or destroying them (a direct collision wouldn't be necessary; gravity alone could do the job in a near-miss, ripping a planet apart like Jupiter did the Shoemaker-Levy comet on that body's near miss of the gas giant in the months preceding the final collision). Fortunately, 95% of star systems may be free of such disasterous conditions... -- "Search for New Planets Yields Confusion" By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, March 2, 1999, The New York Times -- "Lost Worlds? Exiled Planets Might Support Life"By Deborah Zabarenko, (Reuters)Yahoo! News Science Headlines, June 30 1999 Even our own Earth could have a potential rogue sibling or two out there somewhere. "Scientist says Earth may have a long-lost 'twin'" By WILLIAM McCALL, June 30, 1999, http://www.nandotimes.com, Nando Media/Associated Press -- "Lost in Space" by David Watanabe, http://www.exosci.com/exosci.com, July 01, 1999 The total mass of a proto-solar system's dust disk determines the speed by which planets will form. Less mass delivers much slower formation times, such as 10 million years or thereabouts, while more mass leads to more rapidity and violence in formation-- perhaps in as short a time as one million years. By implication, mass would also determine to a great extent the general composition of the resulting planetary system. -- Early planet formation triggers planet offspring ,8 DECEMBER 1999, EurekAlert! Contact: Janet Wongjf.wong@utoronto.ca416-978-6974University of Toronto |
It appears logical to assume that the more rapid and violent the planetary formation process is, the more unbalanced the resulting system-- with the consquences possibly being inimical to higher lifeforms. So perhaps those systems which tend to form fastest are also those which end up with the Jupiter-like worlds in planet-killing cometary style orbits. And perhaps these conditions only extend to some 5% or so of star systems, as described before.
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Thrown into space, the oceans would require about a million years to freeze solid. Hydrothermal vents on the sea floor would sustain some life from the ongoing radioactive decay within the Earth.
-- Solar system's ultimate fate, 20 FEBRUARY 2000, EurekAlert! Contact: Sally Pobojewskipobo@umich.edu734-647-1844University of Michigan |
When the Sun previously swelled into a red giant, it may have peeled away the atmosphere and outer layers of the Earth, leaving behind only the nickel and iron core (in an even worse scenario the Sun swallowed the Earth completely).
Eventually the Sun reversed course, shrinking down to the size of Venus, becoming a white dwarf star. Some white dwarfs possess very strong magnetic fields. Thus, enormous electrical currents may be incurred in metallic planetary cores such as the remnant of Earth, with currents possibly passing between the Sun and Earth core through a medium of ionized gases separating them.
Could this mean an observer might see mighty lightning bolts passing between the naked core and the Sun? Perhaps.
-- The Earthcould be in foran electrifying time By Hazel Muir, From New Scientist, 1 August 1998 |
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-- explorezone.com NEWS: A tourist's guide to the Milky Way ByRobert Roy Britt, explorezone.com . 01.05.00, http://www.space.com/ |
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-- Solar system's ultimate fate, 20 FEBRUARY 2000, EurekAlert! Contact: Sally Pobojewskipobo@umich.edu734-647-1844University of Michigan -- Time after time by Marcus Chown, describing the book The Five Ages of the Universe by Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin, Free Press; New Scientist, 21 August 1999 |
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Eventually dark matter becomes the main fuel of the remaining solar furnaces.
-- The five ages of the universe By Peter N. Spotts; The Christian Science Monitor; July 15, 1999 |
As this Era progresses, the surviving stars gradually become cooler and cooler, until at some point the temperatures are sufficiently low to support life (yes, temperatures comparable to planets). The white dwarfs also boast plenty of heavy elements from which life might form, and enormous spans of time within which such development could occur. The brown dwarfs too may offer harbors for new life development.
-- Time after time by Marcus Chown, describing the book The Five Ages of the Universe by Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin, Free Press; New Scientist, 21 August 1999 |
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Even black holes evaporate, via Hawking radiation. Such radiation is now the biggest energy source for the Universe as a whole.
-- The five ages of the universe By Peter N. Spotts; The Christian Science Monitor, July 15, 1999 |
There may be lifeforms structured from various combinations of black holes now. The very low free energies of this time might impose severe restrictions on the living processes of such entities however-- in effect making them very, very slow to respond to stimuli.
-- Time after time by Marcus Chown, describing the book The Five Ages of the Universe by Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin, Free Press; New Scientist, 21 August 1999 |
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The last of the greatest black holes in the universe has evaporated to nothing by way of Hawking radiation.
-- Time after time by Marcus Chown, describing the book The Five Ages of the Universe by Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin; New Scientist, 21 August 1999 |
The still expanding universe has become cold and extremely dilute. There are virtually no concentrations of free energy left, and enormous distances between appreciable mass concentrations (and we're talking possibly microscopic mass accumulations here-- objects like planets, asteroids, and stars no longer exist; their very mass has decayed into their constituent atomic elements).
This may represent the long, drawn out end of the universe-- ending with a whimper rather than a bang. Or, it may set the stage for the universe to make a phase change of sorts to a whole new reality. Physicists speculate that sometime during this Era the terribly low energy state of the universe might enable it at last to tap into the energy of the quantum vacuum-- and thereby perform a 're-set' of sorts for the universe entire. That is, a wholly new universe, with a fresh and different set of physical laws, might spring into being. Perhaps even via a repeat of the Big Bang.
Time after time by Marcus Chown, describing the book The Five Ages of the Universe by Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin, Free Press; New Scientist, 21 August 1999 -- The five ages of the universe By Peter N. Spotts, Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor, July 15, 1999 |
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-- Is God in the Details? From cosmic coincidence to conservative cosmopolitics. By Kenneth Silber, REASON, July 1999, http://www.nekotech.com/Reason/ It's getting more and more difficult to prove the impossibility of time travel into the past (and so its close relation as well: faster-than-light transport)-- at least under some pretty extreme conditions. Closed time loops (or "closed timelike curves") look possible according to quantum theory. In such loops a traveler's own perceptions of time would continue to seem normal (including the time kept on their clocks), even as they proceeded towards and ended up in the same spot/point in spacetime from which they began. In the particular type of loops investigated here, travel into the past does not/cannot change the events of the timeline. The concepts do not suggest an artificial means for time travel could be built. Instead, they may point to ways to resolve various uncertainties regarding the Big Bang which created our universe-- i.e., such loops might allow a universe to give birth to itself (and perhaps others too). -- Evading quantum barrier to time travel by I. Peterson, April 11, 1998, Science News Online, http://www.sciencenews.org/ |
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