Yeah well it will not be able to biochemically do anything so such an existence will be as the torpor of death anyway. So semantically no life will be able to synthesise, metabolise, or reproduce, meaning it will not really be alive anyway. Not that that matters. If 5 billion years is inconceivable the heat death of the Universe is just completely mind blowingly far off. To the order of magnitude in the squillions perhaps even bazillions.surreptitious57 wrote:Yes. It would be more accurate to state that it will freeze to a fraction above absolute zero. And while life as we know it will cease to exist, the simplest and most primitive type - bacteria - may not. Experiments have been conducted that demonstrate that it can survive in such extreme environmemts. It has already been discovered in outer space and radioactive matter. Also, helium is the only gas that can't freeze at absolute zero. So it isn't true to state that nothing will srvive, but that virtually nothing will, But I was referencing this in general rather than specific terms.Aos Si wrote:Indeed although absolute zero as a temperature is forbidden by the uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics, it will approach 0K asymptotically in fact, heat death means that no processes at the atomic or chemical level can happen, hence no biochemistry, all process will therefore be mediated by quantum phenomena such as gravitation and electromagnetisms effects which will still exist.surreptitious57 wrote:If the expansion is infinite, then the entire Universe freezes to absolute zero and nll life will cease to exist.Crumple wrote:The expansion is speeding up and what if that does not stop? Perhaps a randomly occuring bit of something(the universe) is dispersing into a infinite sea of nothing(the emptiverse)?
Nothing will survive in the sense that nothing will exhibit any characteristics we know as life at heat death, and will eventually break down into its constituent atoms as even they decay, and then even the protons and neutrons do, even subatomic particles such as that have a lifespan. This will leave a sea of mostly photons and other leptons and not much else, a quantum foam of almost nothing as even blackholes evaporate.