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Please show proof.

2006-12-17 14:56:30 · 28 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

28 answers

Assuming the Universe doesn't have enough matter to reverse it's outward expansion (and it is fairly certain that it doesn't) then all of the stars will have exhausted their nuclear fuel long before 900 trillion years is up. The Universe will be a very cold, dead place by then, and there won't be any living creatures anywhere.

2006-12-17 15:40:23 · answer #1 · answered by I don't think so 5 · 1 0

Not a chance.

Even if you want to disregard the possible effects of future evolution and all the natural and man-made calamities that could befall the Earth in that time, keep in mind that 900 trillion years is approximately 60,000 times the current age of the universe.

The Sun will become a red giant in 5 to 10 billion more years, rendering the Earth uninhabitable. If we grant us the ability to cross interstellar space and find new homes, we still have to deal with the fact that new homes won't be available forever.

Stars are still forming, but each one uses up a certain amount of primordial hydrogen. As it runs out, fewer and fewer stars will form; bright stars will burn out first, followed by the more sedate ones. Assuming the universe is open and destined for "heat death", the last small, cool, slow-burning stars to form will probably be burned out by the time the universe is 250 trillion years old, leaving any possible life forms to freeze without an energy source anywhere to be found less than a third of the way to your deadline.

If a fate other than "heat death" is in store, such as the Big Crunch or the Big Rip, it may well happen well before 900 trillion years, and the universe won't even exist anymore.

2006-12-17 17:37:23 · answer #2 · answered by Rochester 4 · 0 0

If humans did exist that far into the future, we wouldn't be human anymore. Think of how much we've changed in the last 3 million years on this planet, and imagine us 900 trillion years from now after colonizing space. We're evolving now, we'll evolve a lot more in that amount of time. So no, humans won't exist, and I point to evolution as proof.......or at least strong evidence.

2006-12-17 15:31:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

we can never really know if humans will exist 900 trillion years from now or in any time in the future in that case. Nobody knows the future. There are thousands of asteroids in space passing through our planet's orbit and who right now we're just lucky nothing so major has hit us but there is a fair possibility that an asteroid will us that will wipe out all life on earth. think of what happened to those prehistoric reptiles. They became extinct. The same thing could happen to us unless through our brilliant minds, we discover some viable planet in space that can sustain life. If we find that, we might a second home and the odds of mankind being wiped out will be reduced since humans will be scattered in space, so to speak. When i think about it, i think the idea is kind of cool. living in other planets and all that. But not at the expense of our planet of course. i love earth and let's she'll continue to love us back or else. we're history.

2006-12-17 17:49:35 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I doubt it. Did humans exist 900 trillion years ago? Has any form of life existed for 900 trillion years? Not to mention evolution. Or maybe Judgement Day? I do not believe that in 900 trillion years humans will exist, or exist in the same state of being they do at this time.

2006-12-17 15:01:50 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

What an strange number to choose for this question. One wonders how on earth you arrived at it.

900 trillion years is:
- about 60000 times the age of the universe
- about 200000 times the age of the planet
- about 60 billion times the age of the human species

Will humans exists for 60 billion times longer than we have, and sixty thousand times longer than our universe has existed?

No, of course not. Don't be silly.

2006-12-17 16:21:16 · answer #6 · answered by Stephen McNeil 4 · 0 0

Considering the universe is only 13.6 billion years old, I highly doubt it. 900 trillion years is a long time, and it is debatable if the universe will even exist after that absurdly long amount of time, let alone humans.

2006-12-17 17:22:53 · answer #7 · answered by Roman Soldier 5 · 0 0

i could be keen to pay a intense cost, rather if the reaction additionally lined measures to bypass far flung from dependence upon fossil fuels and changes in social attitudes in direction of the parable of infinite financial growth. Trevor, it is important be conscious that your expenses per guy or woman are averaged around the finished globe. via fact that billions do no longer earn $900 per 3 hundred and sixty 5 days, the actual expenses of risky climate replace are probable to electrify wealthy human beings (i.e. all individuals with an internet connection) greater (in greenback words) than the damaging (nonetheless the damaging will go through greater, via fact that they are going to be dropping a number of what they might desire to outlive). additionally, the expenses of mitigation are additionally probable to fall greater heavily on the wealthy, so we will not merely take an estimate of finished value and divide it by using the style of folk interior the worldwide. yet that's all extremely common, via fact this is the wealthy, stepped forward countries who've had by using a techniques the biggest emissions traditionally. we've led to the issue, however the poorest are already people who're suffering first and maximum for it. what's it properly worth to maximum appropriate a ethical incorrect? i do no longer think of a greenback cost ticket is an perfect way of measuring it. (playstation i could upload some references for my declare, yet i'm in a hurry on the 2nd. i will see if i'm able to come back to it later).

2016-12-15 03:19:06 · answer #8 · answered by lacy 4 · 0 0

Most modern theories, supported by WMAP evidence show that the universe is going to continue to expand faster and faster...forever.

Essentially what this means is that in about 50 billion years, the universe will be expanding so fast that all of the energy within it will be expanding too fast to stay as matter. Everything within the universe as we know it will be annihilated.

So the answer is, no...we will not exist.

2006-12-17 16:14:41 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Universe is about 13 billion years old, it may be more or less the same time before it collapses into itself. Where do you think we could go if the Big Bang reverses itself into a singularity?

2006-12-17 20:08:14 · answer #10 · answered by dimimo 2 · 0 0

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