Scientists have used the world's fastest supercomputer to show the universe as it has never been seen before. In this incredible video, scientists from the Department of Energy’s Argonne National ...
Frontier, the second fastest supercomputer in the world, used dark matter and the movement of gas and plasma rather than just ...
Research team includes astrophysicists, computer scientists, artists, and philosophers from UC Riverside, USC, and Carnegie ...
A sample of simulations showing a model of the expanding universe (left) and a zoomed-in view of tracer particles (right). Image: Argonne National Laboratory, U.S Dept of Energy Last month, a team of ...
Information could become the fifth state of matter alongside gas, plasma, liquid, and solid states. A scientist has proposed ...
The simulations will be used by astronomers to test the standard model of cosmology. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. The world's ...
Our understanding of cosmology hinges on how well we know our own local universe, which remains poorly mapped and poorly ...
What if gravity were informed by the way matter was arranged in the universe — and a sign that we were living in a reality composed by a giant computer? In a new paper published in the journal AIP ...
We have long taken it for granted that gravity is one of the basic forces of nature—one of the invisible threads that keeps the universe stitched together. But suppose that this is not true. Suppose ...
Astronomers have released a set of more than a million simulated images showcasing the cosmos as NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will see it. This preview will help scientists ...
Melvin M. Vopson is affiliated with the University of Portsmouth and the Information Physics Institute. We have long taken it for granted that gravity is one of the basic forces of nature – one of the ...