Astronomy Picture of the Day
The Astronomy Picture of the day is a Video.
To See it:
Discover the cosmos!
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is
featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
2014 May 12
Illustris Simulation of the Universe
Video Credit:
Illustris Collaboration,
NASA,
PRACE,
XSEDE,
MIT,
Harvard CfA;
Music: The Poisoned Princess
(Media Right Productions)
Explanation:
How did we get here?
Click play, sit back, and watch.
A
new computer simulation
of the evolution of the universe -- the largest and most sophisticated yet produced --
provides new insight into how
galaxies formed and
new perspectives into
humanity's place in the universe.
The
Illustris project -- the largest of its type yet --
exhausted 20 million CPU hours following
12 billion resolution elements spanning a cube 35 million
light years
on a side as it evolved over 13 billion years.
The simulation
is the first to track matter into the
formation of a wide variety of galaxy types.
As the
virtual universe evolves, some of the matter expanding with the
universe soon gravitationally condenses to form filaments,
galaxies, and
clusters of galaxies.
The
above video takes the perspective of a virtual camera circling part of this changing universe, first showing the evolution of
dark matter, then
hydrogen gas coded by temperature
(
0:45),
then heavy elements such as
helium and
carbon
(
1:30),
and then back to
dark matter
(
2:07).
On the lower left the time since the
Big Bang is listed, while on the lower right the type of matter being shown is listed.
Explosions (0:50)
depict galaxy-center supermassive black holes expelling bubbles of hot gas.
Interesting discrepancies between
Illustris and the
real universe do exist and are being studied, including why
the simulation
produces an overabundance of old stars.
Tomorrow's picture: nebula hungry
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Authors & editors:
Robert Nemiroff
(
MTU) &
Jerry Bonnell (
UMCP)
NASA Official: Phillip Newman
Specific rights apply.
NASA Web
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A service of:
ASD at
NASA /
GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
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