Can Life Exist in the Universe or Multiverse After the Big Crunch?

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The discussion centers on the possibility of life existing after the Big Crunch, with participants concluding that life is unlikely due to the universe collapsing to a singularity where known physics fails. Tachyons, hypothetical particles that always move faster than light, are mentioned but deemed irrelevant to the collapse scenario. The consensus is that if the universe ends in a Big Crunch, everything, including any potential tachyons, would cease to exist. The finality of the singularity means it cannot support life or any physical phenomena. Overall, the thread concludes that the Big Crunch would eliminate the possibility of life in the universe or multiverse.
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After the Big Crunch, will the universe or multiverse support Life?
 
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Well, considering that it is a Big "Crunch" and that the universe will have shrunken down to a point that all known physics disintegrates, I'd say no.
 
Lamdbaenergy said:
Well, considering that it is a Big "Crunch" and that the universe will have shrunken down to a point that all known physics disintegrates, I'd say no.
Then what about Tachyons?
 
Tachyons?
I'm honestly not sure what those kinds of particles would have to do with the collapse of an entire universe.
 
I guess,Nothing! But there must be something like Tachyons having v=c... Right?
 
Hawking14 said:
I guess,Nothing! But there must be something like Tachyons having v=c... Right?

Tachyons are particles where the case of v > c always applies. Their velocities are always faster than c and they are forbidden from traveling any slower.
 
Oh Yeah, I forgot that... Sorry :)
 
Hawking14 said:
what about Tachyons?

If they exist, they exist within the universe, and if there's a Big Crunch, the universe ends, along with everything within it. So the answer to your question remains "no", as Lambdaenergy said.
 
Let me venture a guess. You think of the tachyons as having space-like world lines. And since the final singularity of the big crunch is space-like it might contain space-like curves i.e. tachyons. But the singularity is not part of space-time so the answer is no.
 
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Thank you all for your answers! It helped me a lot... :D
How to close this thread ? Mentors please close this thread...
 
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