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  • Humans can survive in this universe as long as we have an energy source.

  • Unfortunately, the universe will die. It will happen slowly, over many billions of years,

  • but it will happen. On a universal time scale, stars like our sun will be gone in no time.

  • Luckily, there are places that will exist practically forever from a human perspective:

  • the corpses of dead stars...

  • white dwarfs.

  • They could be humanity's last home right before the death of the universe.

  • What are these strange things and what happens when they finally die?

  • How long stars live varies drastically,

  • depending on how massive they are.

  • For example, really massive stars burn hot and fast, dying violently in supernova a few million years after birth.

  • But they're the exception.

  • 97% of all stars will end their existence as white dwarfs.

  • There are two ways this can happen:

  • Small stars - so-called red dwarfs - burn out over trillions of years until they eventually quietly turn into white dwarfs.

  • Medium-sized stars like our sun are more interesting.

  • Imagine the sun as a huge pressure cooker that fuses hydrogen into helium in its core through its gravity.

  • The fusion of elements releases extreme amounts of energy,

  • that pushes outwards and stabilizes the star, keeping it in a delicate balance.

  • When the sun is old, the hydrogen in the core is exhausted,

  • and the sun will begin to burn helium into heavier elements.

  • While doing so, it will shed its outer layers.

  • When this process is over more than half of the sun's mass will be lost into space as a spectacular

  • planetary nebula millions of kilometers across.

  • What remains will be its former core:

  • A white dwarf is born, a star corpse.

  • While its former self was about 100 times its diameter, now

  • it's only about as big as Earth, but still with about half of its former mass.

  • This means it's extremely dense, a teaspoon of white dwarf is about as massive as a car.

  • Its surface gravity is over 100,000 times higher than Earth's.

  • If you tried to land on it, you'd immediately be compressed into a steaming puddle.

  • Life around a white dwarf is very unlikely, but possible.

  • Most of them that exist now were former stars that, well, died, which probably ruined any planets they once had.

  • But that's not all: since they are so small,

  • a planet would need to orbit them about 75 times closer than earth is to the sun to have liquid water.

  • This proximity has up- and downsides:

  • for one, it would tidally lock the planet giving it a permanent day and permanent night.

  • At the edges of these day and night zones life could be possible.

  • But white dwarfs have a very stable energy output,

  • so they might actually be safer to live around than many red dwarfs.

  • This is still speculation at this point,

  • but if we could find the white dwarf with the right conditions to settle around,

  • we could have a home for many billions of years.

  • But why do they shine so much longer than other star types?

  • White dwarfs are very, very hot - up to 40 times hotter than our sun -

  • ranking among the hottest objects in the universe.

  • But they are not incredibly active.

  • All the heat inside of them is trapped and has nowhere to go.

  • Only on its outer layer can it escape into space.

  • But space is mostly empty, so heat can't be transferred by conduction.

  • The only way energy can escape is by radiation.

  • This is so inefficient that white dwarfs will take trillions of years to cool down,

  • which may make them humanity's last refuge.

  • They might be the last sources of light and energy in a dying universe.

  • According to some estimates white dwarfs might shine as long as 100 billion billion years,

  • ten billion times longer than the universe has existed. So far into the future that no regular stars will shine any more,

  • galaxies will have evaporated, and

  • only then will the first white dwarf turn into the first black dwarf.

  • When this happens the last hope for life will die off.

  • Black dwarfs will be inactive spheres with no energy left to give,

  • still massive enough to kill you if you get too close.

  • So cold that they'll be near the coldest possible temperature in the universe,

  • so dark that they are practically invisible.

  • The universe will enter its last stage - heat death - which will leave the universe unrecognizable,

  • an absolutely dark and cold graveyard,

  • with black holes and black dwarfs scattered over trillions of lightyears.

  • We don't know for sure what will happen with black dwarfs in the end.

  • If the proton - one of the fundamental parts of atoms - has a limited lifespan,

  • black dwarfs will slowly evaporate over many trillions of years.

  • If the proton does not decay,

  • black dwarfs will probably turn into spheres of pure iron via quantum tunneling, over a timespan

  • so obscenely gigantic that calling it forever is okay.

  • These iron spheres will then travel completely alone through a dark universe.

  • Nothing new will happen anymore...

  • forever.

  • While this may sound kind of dark, this is so far away that for our purposes today, it might as well not happen at all.

  • It doesn't matter what happens in a billion trillion years.

  • Right now, we happen to exist at an excellent time,

  • able to be in awe about a universe filled with endless stars and light and planets.

  • And enough time to visit them one day.

  • Our music is finally available on Spotify and iTunes. it's composed by our good friends at Epic Mountain,

  • two guys with a studio who make music for a living.

  • You can check them out here, and follow them on Facebook and Twitter. And if you like our videos,

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  • It really would be extremely helpful.

  • If you need an excuse to delay work a little bit longer, here's a playlist with more space videos.

Humans can survive in this universe as long as we have an energy source.

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