Graphical timeline from Big Bang to Heat Death

This is the timeline of the Universe from Big Bang to Heat Death scenario.

  • Planck epoch
  • Big Bang
  • 0: Linear time
  • Double-logaritmic time:
  • 100*log log year
  • Heat Death
  • 10E-43 seconds
  • One picosecond
  • One nanosecond
  • One microsecond
  • One millisecond
  • 10E-10 years
  • One second
  • One hour
  • One year
  • One thousand years
  • One million years
  • One billion years
  • 10E10 years
  • One trillion years
  • One quadrillion years
  • 10E100 years
  • 10100 years
  • 10E1000 years
  • The Primordial Era
  • The Stelliferous Era
  • The Degenerate Era
  • The Black Hole Era
  • The Dark Era
  • The Photon Era
  • Inflationary epoch
  • Radiation domination
  • Matter domination
  • The Primordial Dark Age
  • Reionization
  • Life on Earth
  • Planck time, the smallest observable unit of time ~and the time before which science is unable to ~describe the universe. At this point, the force of ~gravity separated from the electronuclear force.
  • Separation of the strong force from the ~electronuclear force.
  • Quarks and anti-quarks begin forming.
  • The weak force separates from the ~electromagnetic force resulting in the four ~separate forces we know today.
  • Electrons and positrons begin to annihilate each ~other.
  • Quarks combine to form protons and neutrons. ~Quark/anti-quark pairs combine into mesons.
  • Lepton/anti-lepton pairs are annihilated by ~existing photons. Neutrinos break free and exist ~on their own.
  • Formation of atomic nuclei (hydrogen). Nuclear ~fusion begins to occur as they collide to form ~heavier elements.
  • Nuclear fusion ends after AbOUT 3 minutes.
  • 372,000 to 387,000 years - Hydrogen nuclei ~capture electrons to form stable atoms. Photons ~are no longer able to interact strongly with atoms. ~Cosmic microwave background radiation forms.
  • 100 million years. First star began to shine.
  • 600 million years. Formation of the first galaxy
  • 4 billion years. Earliest Population I stars
  • 8.7 billion years. Formation of the Sun
  • 13.7 billion years: this present day
  • 18.7 billion years Sun becomes a red giant
  • 200 billion years. The Sun dies down.
  • Formation of new stars ceases. The last star die ~down. Death of unintelligent water-based life.
  • Solar systems no longer exists. Planets flung out ~of ORBit or consumed by larger bodies.
  • Galaxies no longer exist. Stars flung out of orbit ~or consumed by larger bodies as black holes.
  • Proton decay to 1/2
  • All protons decay. The matter that stars and life etc ~was built of no longer exist.
  • Small and medium sized black holes have ~evaporated
  • The last supermassive black holes have ~evaporated

Usually the logarithmic scale is used for such timelines but it compresses the most interesting Stelliferous Era too much as this example shows. Therefore a double-logarithmic scale s (s*100 in the graphics) is used instead. The minimum of it is unfortunately only 1, not 0 as needed, and the negative outputs for inputs smaller than 10 are useless. Therefore the time from 0.1 to 10 years is collapsed to a single point 0, but that doesn't matter in this case because nothing special happens in the history of the universe during that time.

s =

\begin{cases}
\log_{10} \log_{10} year & \mbox{if } year > 10 \mbox{ , corresponding to } year = 10^{10^{s}} \\
0 & \mbox{if } 0.1 \le year \le 10 \\
-\log_{10} (-\log_{10} year) & \mbox{if } year < 0.1 \mbox{ , corresponding to } year = 10^{-10^{-s}}
\end{cases}

Comparison of log10 and log10log10 scales

year

log10 year

combination of log10log10 year and
-log10(-log10 year)

101000

1000

3

10100

100

2

1010

10

1

102

2

0.30

101

1

0

100

0

undefined but here forced to 0

10-1

-1

0

10-2

-2

-0.30

10-10

-10

-1

10-100

-100

-2

The seconds in the timescale have been converted to years by second/31557600 using the Julian year.

See also

  • Big Bang
  • Heat death of the universe
  • Graphical timeline of the Big Bang
  • Graphical timeline of our universe
  • Graphical timeline of the Stelliferous Era
  • Tiny Graphical timeline from Big Bang to Heat Death. This timeline uses the log scale for comparison with the loglog scale in this article.