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New software creates slice of universe
Aug 16, 11:13 am
Washington, August 16 (ANI): Scientists have invented a new computational approach that can accurately follow the birth and evolution of thousands of galaxies over billions of years.For the first time, it's now possible to build a universe from scratch that brims with galaxies like we observe around us."We've created the full variety of galaxies we see in the local universe," said Mark Vogelsberger at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA).Our cosmic neighbourhood is littered with majestic spiral galaxies like Andromeda, the Pinwheel, and the Whirlpool. Spirals are common, but previous simulations had trouble creating them. Instead, they produced lots of blobby galaxies clumped into balls, without the broad disks and outstretched arms of a typical spiral.The new software, called Arepo, solves this problem. Created by Volker Springel at the Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies (HITS), Arepo generates a full-fledged simulation of the universe, taking as input only the observed afterglow of the Big Bang and evolving forward in time for 14 billion years."We took all the advantages of previous codes and removed the disadvantages. Our simulations improve over previous ones as much as the Giant Magellan Telescope will improve upon any telescope that exists now," said Debora Sijacki (CfA)," explained Springel.When completed later this decade, the Giant Magellan Telescope's 24.5-meter aperture will make it the largest telescope in the world.One of Arepo's key advantages is the geometry it uses. Previous simulations divided space into a bunch of cubes of fixed size and shape. Arepo uses a grid that flexes and moves in space to match the motions of the underlying gas, stars, dark matter, and dark energy.The simulations ran on Harvard's Odyssey high-performance supercomputer, using in total 1,024 processor cores. This fast machine allowed the scientists to compress 14 billion years into only a few months-an endeavour that would have kept a desktop computer busy for hundreds of years!The team's future goals include simulating much larger volumes of the universe at unprecedented resolution, thus creating the largest and most realistic model of the universe ever made. (ANI)
New evidence supports theory of cosmic impact 12,800 years ago
May 22, 10:35 am
Washington, May 22 (ANI): Emerging evidence continues to point to a major cosmic impact 12,800 years ago as the primary cause for the tragic loss of nearly all of the remarkable large animals that had survived the stresses of many ice age periods, including mammoths, mastodons, giant ground sloths, American camel and horse, and saber- toothed cats.
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Coronal mass ejection collisions can be super-elastic
May 22, 10:35 am
Washington, May 22 (ANI): A study has confirmed that collisions of coronal mass ejections (CMEs), emissions of magnetized ionized gas from the Sun, can be super-elastic.
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Climate change after cosmic impact may have wiped out wooly mammoths
May 21, 11:45 am
Washington, May 21 (ANI): A new research has found evidence of a major cosmic event near the end of the Ice Age, which resulted in a climate change that forced many species, including wooly mammoths, to die.
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Venus, Jupiter and Mercury will dance in spring twilight
May 21, 11:07 am
Washington, May 21 (ANI): Three planets - Venus, Jupiter, and Mercury will present a spectacular sky show during the last week of May.
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