The Next Million Years: The Death of Stars, the Fate of the Milky Way, and How the Universe Ends — The Universe Series
The sun will die. The Milky Way will collide with its neighbor. The last star will burn out, leaving behind a universe so cold and dark that even black holes will eventually evaporate into nothing. And it's all already in motion.
The Next Million Years takes you on an awe-inspiring tour through cosmic time — from the violent deaths of stars to the eerie silence of the Dark Era — written in plain, gripping language that brings the science to life without a single equation.
You'll journey through:
- How stars die — and why their endings are among the most spectacular events in the cosmos
- The monster at the center — the supermassive black hole lurking at the heart of our galaxy, and what it means for our future
- Neutron stars — objects so dense that a single spoonful would weigh a billion tons
- The collision that's already started — the slow-motion merger between the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy, billions of years in the making
- The last stars — the final embers of stellar life in a universe winding down
- The Dark Era — an unimaginable epoch after all stars are gone, when the universe becomes a graveyard of black holes and cold cinders
- Other ways it ends — from the Big Rip to vacuum decay, the wildest theories about the universe's final moments
- Why it matters that you're here now — a surprisingly moving reflection on what it means to exist during the golden age of stars
This is not a textbook. It's a front-row seat to the grandest story ever told — one that started 13.8 billion years ago and ends in a silence beyond imagination. Whether you're a lifelong space enthusiast or simply someone who has ever looked up at the night sky and wondered, The Next Million Years will change how you see the cosmos — and your place in it.
Part of The Universe series. Available as PDF + EPUB.