http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993461

'Phantom menace' may rip up cosmos 
 
  
19:00 05 March 03 
  
Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition 
  
Stand by for a nightmare end to the Universe - a runaway expansion so
violent that galaxies, planets and even atomic nuclei are literally
ripped apart. The scenario could play out as soon as 22 billion years
from now.

   
 End of everything 
"Until now we thought the Universe would either re-collapse to a big
crunch or expand forever to a state of infinite dilution," says Robert
Caldwell of Dartmouth College, New Hampshire. "Now we've come up with a
third possibility - the 'big rip'."

Whether the big rip happens or not depends on the nature of the
mysterious dark energy that is pulling the Universe apart. We know that
the expansion of the Universe is speeding up, but most physicists assume
the acceleration is likely to stay constant or get weaker over time. 

But Caldwell takes a different view. He thinks the dark energy causing
the expansion could be growing more powerful. "We call it phantom
energy," he says. "It's pretty weird stuff."


Shrink to a point 


Under the influence of phantom energy, the runaway expansion of the
Universe would become ever more violent, stretching more and more of the
Universe further and further away until the light from the stars cannot
reach us. 

"Every observer sees the visible Universe around them shrink ever faster,
eventually down to a point," says Caldwell. For all practical purposes,
the Universe will have ended.

The existence of phantom energy has always been a possibility - even if a
pretty unlikely one. But astronomers have tried and failed to rule it
out. In particular, detailed measurements released in February of
background radiation left over from the early Universe leave the door
open.

Now, in a paper submitted to Physical Review, Caldwell and his colleagues
at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena have calculated how
phantom energy would bring the Universe to an end. They found that as the
phantom energy grows, its repulsive force becomes strong enough to rip
all bound systems apart, starting with galaxy clusters and rapidly moving
down the scale to galaxies, stars, planets and atoms.

Caldwell says he was surprised by the violence of the Universe's end -
the received wisdom was that an ever-expanding Universe should end with a
whimper. "In the last moments, even atomic nuclei will be ripped apart,"
he says.


Final millisecond 


In the most extreme scenario, the big rip will happen 22 billion years
from now, with the Milky Way destroyed 60 million years before the end
and atoms torn to pieces in the final 10-19 seconds (see graphic). 

  
"If humanoids survive, they could observe all but the final millisecond,"
adds England's Astronomer Royal Martin Rees, who has also considered the
possibility of phantom energy. "That's when the cosmic repulsion gets up
to the tensile strength of our bodies and tears us apart. It's unlikely,
but it can't be proved impossible."

Astronomers' best bet for working out which fate is in store for the
Universe is the Supernova/Acceleration Probe (SNAP), a satellite proposed
for launch later this decade. SNAP will make detailed measurements of
thousands of supernovae, to pin down exactly how fast they are moving
away from us and hopefully work out how dark energy is changing over
time.

Most physicists probably will not be rooting for phantom energy. That is
because if it exists, it will cause them all kinds of theoretical
headaches. For example, Einstein's theory of gravity predicts the
existence of minuscule wormholes - short cuts through space-time. 

Normally they snap shut so fast we never notice them. But phantom
energy's repulsive gravity would be powerful enough to hold wormholes
open, and perhaps even push them wide enough apart for spacecraft to use
them for faster-than-light travel. "This raises the spectre of time
machines and all their paradoxes, which physicists find very
uncomfortable," says Caldwell. 
 

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