Astronomers may have unwittingly hastened the end of the Universe by simply looking at it, according to a theory reported in the forthcoming edition of New Scientist.
The novel idea is being aired by two US physicists, who attack the notion that the Universe, believed to have been created in the “Big Bang” some 13.7 billion years ago, will go on well, forever.
In fact, the poor old cosmos is in a rather delicate state, they say.
Until recently, a common idea was that the energy unleashed in the Big Bang happened when a “false vacuum”— a bubble of high energy with repulsive gravity, broke down into a safe, zero-energy “ordinary” vacuum.
But recent evidence places a cosmic question-mark over this cosy thought.
For one thing, cosmologists have discovered that the Universe is still expanding. They believe that a strange, yet-to-be-detected form of energy called dark energy pervades the Universe, which would explain why the sum of all the visible sources of energy fall way short of what should be out there.
Dark energy is a result of the Big Bang and is accelerating the Universe’s expansion. If so, the Universe is not in a nice, stable zero-vacuum state but simply another “false vacuum” state that may abruptly decay again and with cataclysmic consequences.
The energy shift from the decay would destroy everything in the Universe, “wiping the slate clean,” says Lawrence Krauss of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.