In the distant future, most of the stars in the universe will be dead. If you were standing on earth looking at the sky it would be completely black. As for your question, stars already orbit around each other like planets. In an abstract sense the stars in our galaxy orbit the center of the galaxy (a really big black hole) like the planets orbiting the sun. This makes the galaxy just a really big solar system with billions upon billions of "planets."
With this analogy it is also interesting to note that our sun has 9 (well 8) large moons.
2006-09-15 18:41:03
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answer #1
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answered by ? 4
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I think the sky will look the same .. dead stars will be replaced by new stars. Also i guess we will have much better understanding abt the universe, perhaps able to discover the center of universe or the central "sun" for the entire universe to revolve around.. probly, all galaxies will be revolving around this gaint central galaxy, including thier own suns. At present, we are limited to think of our sun and its planets. Once we discover more suns and more planets around them, we will able to deduce the central one which orchestrates the whole thing.. possibly in 2000 yrs from now. Eventually all galaxies will converge towards the central one. Few of the weaker "suns" will give away thier planets to neighbouring "suns" in course of time and only the fittest and strongest galaxies will survive, and they will be most likely to be closer to the central Sun. Then it will be fight for the fittest among them, until everything is swallowed by the central sun ... all planets of all galaxies will be ultimately revolving around this central sun (and the only sun) and if you beleive in god, you can count that the end is near. The objective is to get closer to god or this central thing whatever :P
It is my own theory though..
2006-09-15 22:57:13
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answer #2
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answered by AaRoN 2
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A quadrillion years from now, we will likely be in the universe's next incarnation, having been through our current Big Bang, then through the "Big Crunch" in which all matter stops expanding, and contracts in upon itself again.
The universe will be exactly the same as before, yet completely and utterly different.
There is some evidence that the Big Crunch will not occur because there is not enough mass in the universe to slow itself down, but I believe there is, we just haven't detected it yet.
2006-09-19 17:21:21
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answer #3
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answered by marsminute 3
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Nothing in existence will be around in that length of time
2006-09-16 01:23:25
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answer #4
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answered by bprice215 5
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of course it is
2006-09-16 08:15:49
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answer #5
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answered by scifuntubes 3
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maybe that is real
2006-09-17 02:02:16
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answer #6
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answered by david w 5
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