0:00:06.494,0:00:07.890 Looking up at the night sky, 0:00:07.890,0:00:10.910 we are amazed by how it seems to go on forever. 0:00:10.910,0:00:12.395 But what will the sky look like 0:00:12.395,0:00:13.865 billions of years from now? 0:00:13.865,0:00:15.372 A particular type of scientist, 0:00:15.372,0:00:16.616 called a cosmologist, 0:00:16.616,0:00:19.531 spends her time thinking about that very question. 0:00:19.531,0:00:21.924 The end of the universe is intimately linked 0:00:21.924,0:00:23.868 to what the universe contains. 0:00:23.868,0:00:25.170 Over 100 years ago, 0:00:25.170,0:00:27.879 Einstein developed the Theory of General Relativity, 0:00:27.879,0:00:29.923 formed of equations that help us 0:00:29.923,0:00:31.258 understand the relationship 0:00:31.258,0:00:33.462 between what a universe is made of 0:00:33.462,0:00:34.511 and its shape. 0:00:34.511,0:00:36.124 It turns out that the universe 0:00:36.124,0:00:38.178 could be curved like a ball or sphere. 0:00:38.178,0:00:40.676 We call this positively curved or closed. 0:00:40.676,0:00:42.228 Or it could be shaped like a saddle. 0:00:42.228,0:00:44.488 We call this negatively curved or open. 0:00:44.488,0:00:46.033 Or it could be flat. 0:00:46.033,0:00:47.155 And that shape determines 0:00:47.155,0:00:49.537 how the universe will live and die. 0:00:49.537,0:00:52.632 We now know that the universe is very close to flat. 0:00:52.632,0:00:54.338 However, the components of the universe 0:00:54.338,0:00:56.454 can still affect its eventual fate. 0:00:56.454,0:00:58.033 We can predict how the universe 0:00:58.033,0:00:59.611 will change with time 0:00:59.611,0:01:01.793 if we measure the amounts or energy densities 0:01:01.793,0:01:04.588 of the various components in the universe today. 0:01:04.588,0:01:06.727 So, what is the universe made of? 0:01:06.727,0:01:09.393 The universe contains all the things that we can see, 0:01:09.393,0:01:11.564 like stars, gas, and planets. 0:01:11.564,0:01:14.733 We call these things ordinary or baryonic matter. 0:01:14.733,0:01:16.593 Even though we see them all around us, 0:01:16.593,0:01:18.702 the total energy density of these components 0:01:18.702,0:01:20.440 is actually very small, 0:01:20.440,0:01:23.530 around 5% of the total energy of the universe. 0:01:23.530,0:01:26.675 So, now let's talk about what the other 95% is. 0:01:26.675,0:01:29.081 Just under 27% of the rest 0:01:29.081,0:01:30.913 of the energy density of the universe 0:01:30.913,0:01:33.825 is made up of what we call dark matter. 0:01:33.825,0:01:36.928 Dark matter is only very weakly interacting with light, 0:01:36.928,0:01:39.208 which means it doesn't shine or reflect light 0:01:39.208,0:01:41.191 in the way that stars and planets do, 0:01:41.191,0:01:42.288 but, in every other way, 0:01:42.288,0:01:44.259 it behaves like ordinary matter -- 0:01:44.259,0:01:46.128 it attracts things gravitationally. 0:01:46.128,0:01:48.761 In fact, the only way we can detect this dark matter 0:01:48.761,0:01:51.052 is through this gravitational interaction, 0:01:51.052,0:01:52.343 how things orbit around it 0:01:52.343,0:01:53.595 and how it bends light 0:01:53.595,0:01:56.008 as it curves the space around it. 0:01:56.008,0:01:58.343 We have yet to discover a dark matter particle, 0:01:58.343,0:02:00.815 but scientists all over the world are searching 0:02:00.815,0:02:02.950 for this elusive particle or particles 0:02:02.950,0:02:05.843 and the effects of dark matter on the universe. 0:02:05.843,0:02:08.256 But this still doesn't add up to 100%. 0:02:08.256,0:02:09.784 The remaining 68% 0:02:09.784,0:02:11.680 of the energy density of the universe 0:02:11.680,0:02:13.759 is made up of dark energy, 0:02:13.759,0:02:16.457 which is even more mysterious than dark matter. 0:02:16.457,0:02:18.422 This dark energy doesn't behave 0:02:18.422,0:02:20.590 like any other substance we know at all 0:02:20.590,0:02:23.013 and acts more like anti-gravity force. 0:02:23.013,0:02:25.420 We say that it has a gravitational pressure, 0:02:25.420,0:02:28.330 which ordinary matter and dark matter do not. 0:02:28.330,0:02:30.213 Instead of pulling the universe together, 0:02:30.213,0:02:32.004 as we would expect gravity to do, 0:02:32.004,0:02:34.287 the universe appears to be expanding apart 0:02:34.287,0:02:36.110 at an ever-increasing rate. 0:02:36.110,0:02:37.938 The leading idea for dark energy 0:02:37.938,0:02:40.148 is that it is a cosmological constant. 0:02:40.148,0:02:42.245 That means it has the strange property 0:02:42.245,0:02:45.434 that it expands as the volume of space increases 0:02:45.434,0:02:47.606 to keep its energy density constant. 0:02:47.606,0:02:49.441 So, as the universe expands 0:02:49.441,0:02:50.772 as it is doing right now, 0:02:50.772,0:02:52.742 there will be more and more dark energy. 0:02:52.742,0:02:54.574 Dark matter and baryonic matter, 0:02:54.574,0:02:55.277 on the other hand, 0:02:55.277,0:02:56.622 don't expand with the universe 0:02:56.622,0:02:58.409 and become more diluted. 0:02:58.409,0:02:59.335 Because of this property 0:02:59.335,0:03:00.694 of the cosmological constant, 0:03:00.694,0:03:03.451 the future universe will be more and more dominated 0:03:03.451,0:03:04.592 by dark energy, 0:03:04.592,0:03:06.330 becoming colder and colder 0:03:06.330,0:03:08.715 and expanding faster and faster. 0:03:08.715,0:03:10.736 Eventually, the universe will run out of gas 0:03:10.736,0:03:11.842 to form stars, 0:03:11.842,0:03:13.941 and the stars themselves will run out of fuel 0:03:13.941,0:03:15.192 and burn out, 0:03:15.192,0:03:18.062 leaving the universe with only black holes in it. 0:03:18.062,0:03:19.255 Given enough time, 0:03:19.255,0:03:21.610 even these black holes will evaporate, 0:03:21.610,0:03:24.523 leaving a universe that is completely cold and empty. 0:03:24.523,0:03:28.127 That is what we call the heat death of the universe. 0:03:28.127,0:03:29.569 While it might sound depressing 0:03:29.569,0:03:30.694 living in a universe 0:03:30.694,0:03:32.735 that will end its lifetime cold 0:03:32.735,0:03:34.237 and devoid of life, 0:03:34.237,0:03:36.027 the end fate of our universe 0:03:36.027,0:03:37.937 actually has a beautiful symmetry 0:03:37.937,0:03:40.087 to its hot, fiery beginning. 0:03:40.087,0:03:41.998 We call the accelerating end state 0:03:41.998,0:03:44.111 of the universe a de Sitter phase, 0:03:44.111,0:03:46.082 named after the Dutch mathematician 0:03:46.082,0:03:47.927 Willem de Sitter. 0:03:47.927,0:03:49.685 However, we also believe 0:03:49.685,0:03:51.520 that the universe had another phase 0:03:51.520,0:03:52.831 of de Sitter expansion 0:03:52.831,0:03:54.607 in the earliest times of its life. 0:03:54.607,0:03:57.228 We call this early period inflation, 0:03:57.228,0:03:58.894 where, shortly after the Big Bang, 0:03:58.894,0:04:01.219 the universe expanded extremely fast 0:04:01.219,0:04:02.860 for a brief period. 0:04:02.860,0:04:04.391 So, the universe will end 0:04:04.391,0:04:06.858 in much the same state as it began, 0:04:06.858,0:04:08.768 accelerating. 0:04:08.768,0:04:10.778 We live at an extraordinary time 0:04:10.778,0:04:12.350 in the life of the universe 0:04:12.350,0:04:13.861 where we can start to understand 0:04:13.861,0:04:15.153 the universe's journey 0:04:15.153,0:04:16.437 and view a history 0:04:16.437,0:04:18.520 that plays itself out on the sky 0:04:18.520,0:04:20.622 for all of us to see.