I just wrote this article and I would like your comment:
The Universe Will Not Die a Heat Death
We assume that the universe is expanding according to the Lambda-CDM model with a fixed Lambda constant.
Imagine a central star, like our sun. Two artificial satellites are orbiting this sun in circular orbits in opposite directions. As the universe expands, the orbits of the satellites are elevated, and the satellites thus gain mechanical energy (the sum of potential and kinetic energy). This energy can be released by causing the satellites to collide or by simply having them graze each other. As a result, some of their kinetic energy is converted into heat, which can be radiated away as thermal radiation, and the satellites descend to lower, more inward orbits. The process can then begin anew.
Yeah I guess there are some phenomenons that I haven't considered. But are they really strong enough to stop the game?
I have already excluded that frame-dragging/emission of gravitational waves stops the game, because the emission of gravitational waves reduces the energy from the system, but the effect is stronger if objects are closer by. when the distance between them is larger, gravitational waves become negligible. hubble expansion, on the other hand, becomes stronger on larger scales. so at some point, it's larger than the loss due to gravitational waves.
explain entropy though, where's thermodynamics in the game?
am ignorant layman .. so.. happy to be corrected
as i understand it the universe is a closed system, right? no more energy is being put into it. yet its expanding constantly. that expanision isnt at the edges.. its everything
at some far off point everything that exists will be so far apart from everything else it will come down to the decay of atoms/particles themselves. thats the heat death
As a lay woman, this is what I thought too. Expansion keeps going until 0°K is reached for everything. And also happy to be enlightened if this is outdated, muddled, just plain wrong.