harmonicaman - a sense of humor! (another view)<br /><br />From the first link, which I disagree with:<br /><br />The Stellar Era Ends<br />100 Trillion Years in the Future<br />Astronomers assume that the universe will gradually wither away, provided it keeps on expanding and does not recollapse under the pull of its own gravity. During the Stelliferous Era, from 10,000 years to 100 trillion years after the Big Bang, most of the energy generated by the universe is in the form of stars burning hydrogen and other elements in their cores. <br /><br />The Degenerate Era<br />100 Trillion to 10^37 Years in the Future<br />This era extends to Ten Trillion Trillion Trillion years after the Big Bang. Most of the mass that we can currently see in the universe is locked up in degenerate stars, those that have blown up and collapsed into black holes and neutron stars, or have withered into white dwarfs. Energy in this era is generated through proton decay and particle annihilation.<br /><br />The Black Hole Era<br />10^38 to 10^100 Years in the Future<br />This era extends to Ten Thousand Trillion Trillion Trillion Trillion Trillion Trillion Trillion Trillion years after the Big Bang. After the epoch of proton decay, the only stellar-like objects remaining are black holes of widely disparate masses, which are actively evaporating during this era. <br /><br />The Dark Era<br />Times Later than 10^100 Years in the Future<br />At this late time, protons have decayed and black holes have evaporated. Only the waste products from these processes remain: mostly photons of colossal wavelength, neutrinos, electrons, and positrons. For all intents and purposes, the universe as we know it has dissipated.<br /><br />Part of the problem is that this view assumes (note the statement "astronomers assume") not only that our universe will expand eternally (which I tentatively agree with, with the exception of the thousands of galaxies including Milky Way heading for the Great Attractor) but also that our unive