After the Final Photon by Norazha Paiman

entropy wins, slow
the last star dims its language
silence without ears

by Norazha Paiman

The heat death of the universe is thermodynamics made personal. Over timescales exceeding 10¹⁴ years, the last Population III stars will exhaust their fuel. Black holes will eventually evaporate through Hawking radiation. Entropy, the measure of disorder in a closed system, trends toward maximum.

What remains is not darkness in any dramatic sense, but equilibrium: a universe with no temperature gradients, no available energy, no work possible. No observers. The second law of thermodynamics does not negotiate.

“Language” in line two gestures toward stellar spectroscopy, the idea that stars speak in emission lines, in wavelengths we decode. When the last photon redshifts into nothing, the question becomes genuinely philosophical: can silence exist without a witness?

Further reading:

‘A dying universe: The long-term fate and evolution of astrophysical objects’, 1997, Adams, F. C., & Laughlin, G., Reviews of Modern Physics, 69(2), 337–372. https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.69.337

‘A larger estimate of the entropy of the universe’, 2010, Egan, C. A., & Lineweaver, C. H., The Astrophysical Journal, 710(2), 1825–1834. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/710/2/1825

Author bio:

Norazha Paiman teaches English and Greek and Latin in Scientific Terminology at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, where his research bridges psychometrics and poetics. He writes poetry that reimagines how science feels, with work appearing in Poetizer, Substack, Consilience, and Poets for Science.

Read another sciku by Norazha: ‘Light’s Posthumous Letter’.

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