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The simulation - called Illustris - covers about 13 billion years of the universe's evolution starting about 12 million years after the Big Bang.
An international team of scientists has created the most detailed large-scale model of the universe to date, a simulation they call TNG50.
The Millennium Simulation used 10 billion particles, 10 times more than similar earlier simulations, to track the evolution of 20 million galaxies over the history of the universe.
One simulation models some of the most energetic explosions in the universe in three dimensions for the first time, revealing why some produce black holes and oddly shaped clouds of material ...
The Bolshoi Simulation is a massive, incredibly detailed model of everything, providing a comprehensive simulation of the universe’s 14 billion year history. Scientists are now exploring the ...
This virtual universe simulation is an amazing display of cosmic evolution starting from its primordial chemical soup up to the creation of life. The ...
The Bolshoi supercomputer simulation, the most accurate and detailed large cosmological simulation run to date, gives physicists and astronomers a powerful new tool.
Researchers are using unprecedented calculations to develop a simulation of what the universe looked like about 400,000 years after the Big Bang.
By strengthening the galactic winds in a computer simulation of the entire history of the universe, astronomers may have a more accurate model with which to study galaxies and their evolution.
The simulation takes into account that there are phenomena in our universe that we have never detected but that have had huge influence on cosmic evolution.