The research, published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, notes that sometime over the "next few trillion years," when the universe is dead as we know it, stars will continue to explode, not with a giant bang, but "very, very slowly fizzle."
“It [the universe] will be a bit of a sad, lonely, cold place,” the study's lead author, theoretical physicist Matt Caplan, said in a statement. “It’s known as ‘heat death,’ where the universe will be mostly black holes and burned-out stars.”
www.foxnews.com
“It [the universe] will be a bit of a sad, lonely, cold place,” the study's lead author, theoretical physicist Matt Caplan, said in a statement. “It’s known as ‘heat death,’ where the universe will be mostly black holes and burned-out stars.”

The universe will end in this way, at this time, researcher says
It's not expected to happen anytime soon, but one scientist has calculated when the universe will end.