There's a theory for that called the Big Crunch. It's one of the three end of the universe scenarios that I am aware of, and it's by far my favorite one. The Big Crunch theory says that the expansion of the universe will eventually slow, stop, then finally begin contracting until all the matter in the universe is in the same place again. It's possible that a Big Bounce would occur... that is, another Big Bang, starting the whole process over again.
I have been thinking of the way gravity works, you know those images we see of like planets around the sun? (gravitational field models)
something like this for example.
what if black holes are actually the good guys of the universe? and without their might and power sucking, the acceleration would actually be faster?
the acceleration of galaxies moving away from each other I mean - sort of like the Big Crunch, but instead with a SNAP what if gravity is like a like layer - and as the universe that we can see continues to expand - gravity "stretches" so that image above, the curve will be less and less over time - but black holes being so immense (since almost every galaxy requires a giant one at the center to become a galaxy) act as the ultimate form of gravity, insanely hungry and dense - preventing this SNAP
but still eventually someday, trillions of years to the upteenth power ---- bla bla bla - SNAP and it doesn't just go slow. the universe snaps back into the big bang AND SIMULTANEOUSLY explodes into another Big Bang event - there is no beginning and no ending? there is no infinite regress problem, existence simply is?
maybe someday humans will be around long enough, to see if gravity "diminishes" in strength... as it continues to stretch, we probably haven't lived long enough as a species to be able to observe this one way or another...
its also possible I am losing my mind. so take everything with a grain of salt.
I wonder how I can ask questions to Dr. Becky, I want to ask her this... its just a random idea. I am sure someone like her though would instantly look at it and be like oh you are way off and here is why, lol which I would welcome, I just like learning.
maybe I am limited in my thinking because I am picturing the SNAP in two dimensions, like a blanket stretched out by two people to its max flat level... but the Cosmos isn't flat at all, and that image above, works in all directions, the gridline is just there to help our small brains understand... so....
stretch and SNAP... but...
yeah I have lost my mind, I give up
edit: the idea is the black hole is creating a super like grid pattern - as seen in the image but billion fold bigger or w.e (I am not a math guy) and this is why every major galaxy (I think) has a massive black hole at its center - a pre-requisite so to speak of stopping the expansion, hmm wrong word, slowing it down within the galaxy it exists within... but also simaltanousely the galaxy's combined gravity on a bigger layer of the Cosmos that we can not observe nor measure - slows down the expansion itself... hmm, but nothing can ever stop the expansion. and if the expansion between galaxies accelerates at a compounding speed - which I think is the case last I read... its like the two people holding a blanket, they are both pulling the blanket would lift more slowly at first, as there is so much "droop" but as both people walk back slowly... towards the end as the blanket becomes more "taut" it would account for that compounding interest, but again I am only thinking in three dimensions here or is the blanket example only two?
edit 2: I guess I just need to research more the relationship between black holes and gravitational fields... then perhaps I can refine what I am thinking... though I am not convinced that is pre-requsite knowledge for what I am contemplating here, for this is on a plane of existence that we can't compute - the interconnections of it all... hmm I don't know. sleep time.
I just always thought of black holes as scary + bad... but in reality they may be our saviors, built into physics - the symphony of physics - like so many other things, that enable stability long enough for life to exist
A way for the Cosmos to know itself ~ Carl Sagan
Edit 3: Why does the Cosmos want to know itself? Why is it inherently built into physics everywhere I look, a symphony of symbiotic relationships?
Edit 4: What if our self-aware state of being was meant for so much more than the way we actually live our lives? What are we missing? What if when we finally can understand black holes, why they exist at centers of galaxies, why this and why that, what if when we truly know the Cosmos we will be able to form a symbiotic relationship with something bigger than we ever imagined?
Edit 5: How do I think beyond this plane? -X, +X, -Y, +Y
I need a better example...