News
Scientists made a twin version of our universe, showing the evolution of all forms of matter and energy, in the biggest cosmological computer simulation to date. When you purchase through links on our ...
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 ...
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 ...
Much remains a mystery about the first billion years of the universe’s history, the epoch in which the cosmos emerged from its dark ages with the dawning of the earliest stars and galaxies. Now ...
Scientific research is normally about chemistry but this time its history. Researchers are using epic computing powers to develop a simulation of the ancient universe. Some 13 billion years of ...
For the past several years, a team of University of California astrophysicists working at Los Alamos National Laboratory have been using a cluster of roughly 300 computer processors to model some of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Why some scientists think reality may be a simulation
The reality we understand and interact with daily might, according to some scientists, be nothing more than an elaborate ...
One of the largest-ever computer models explores dark matter and dark energy, 2 cosmic constituents that remain a mystery LOS ALAMOS, NM, Oct. 26 — Understanding dark energy is the number one issue in ...
Long before galaxies sparkled in the sky or stars took shape, invisible forces stirred in the early Universe. One of those ...
An international research collaboration has used advanced computer simulations to investigate how faint radio signals from ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. A new model predicts that the universe may start collapsing in around 10 billion years. | Credit: ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results