Astrophysicists Build Realistic Virtual Universe 129
sciencehabit writes "In the most detailed effort yet, astrophysicists and cosmologists have modeled the evolution of the universe right down to the formation of individual galaxies. The results of the mammoth computer simulation neatly match multiple astronomical observations, ranging from the distribution of galaxies in massive galaxy clusters to the amounts of neutral hydrogen gas in galaxies large and small (abstract). The findings once again neatly confirm cosmologists' standard theory of the basic ingredients of the universe and how it evolved—a result that may disappoint researchers hoping for new puzzles to solve."
Cool! Where can I get one? (Score:2, Funny)
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Well, you got to start with building the universe so you have some place to put your dollhouse, duh.
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What a coincidence, I've got an apple pie recipe that says the same thing.
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silly, you have to build the universe and then mom to get apple pie from the recipe
Re:Cool! Where can I get one? (Score:4, Informative)
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O, come on, this has literally been available since the beginning of time. Even before.
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You want a simulated universe? Just look around (but don't peek between 10^-26 and 10^-35 - ours cheats there).
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I think I was a bit befuddled for a day or so after that.
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The black holes are where the Kardashian & J.Bieber dolls used to be.
So ... it covers these things? (Score:1)
Where the extra matter went and how the universe expanded faster than the speed of light, temporarily?
Because something tells me TFA is missing that bit or exaggerating in their last line about puzzles.
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I have problems with the reality of this universe, how much damn improvement could a computer sim offer?
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Sounds like theyre trying to re-invent Evony...
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"Space itself expanding" is just a term made up to explain these things to normal people in popular articles. There's no such thing as "space itself", what they really mean is "the coordinate system we happen to be using to describe things in an efficient way that's easy for us to use".
Define space time coordinates according to Special Relativity, relative to our position and assuming a constant speed of light, and you end up with a perfectly valid model of the universe in which nothing goes faster than lig
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TFA mentioned that they included Dark Matter in the model . . . which is quite bold, considering that we are still quite clueless as to what exactly that actually is . . . except that we need Dark Matter to keep our other equations from breaking . . .
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Dark Matter is a real and observed phenomenon.
" Dark Matter to keep our other equations from breaking"
Now you're just being ignorant..or stupid. You pick.
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Exactly. It almost feels like this was made just to make headlines.
Work like this is for a small segment of cosmology research and the paper is a natural progression from previous work. Nothing about it seems headline grabbing as far as the work and original paper.
For example, I'd consider honesty feeling the need to mention their considerations on Dark Matter and why/how they interpreted it in this model.
They used cold dark matter. How that is handled is covered in textbooks at the appropriate level at this point, so not much more description is needed other than specific implementation details and a reference or two.
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They aren't observing, they're fudging things enough to make a simulation that matches reality. Dark matter is an example of a cheat code used to make broken equations resolve properly.
Re: Simalted? (Score:3)
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Any predictive observations will necessarily be limited by the actual applicability of the model. A model may suggest directions to look for interesting phenomena, but it is NEVER confirmation of such. Simulations will only get you as far as your inputs. GIGO.
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No, and you're not seeing a real problem either.
We have a lot of theories, some of which are hard to test, and which could conceivably interact with each other in unexpected ways. If we put them together in a simulation, and get results similar to reality, we have shown that the theories do in fact work together to get realistic results, and, further, no additional theories are needed to cover problems with the simulation (all of this being to the limits of the accuracy of the simulation and observation
Trading routes (Score:1)
I hope they have a pretty accurate trading model with a good economic base. Need to buy and sell across multiple systems to save up for that bad-ass ship.
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As a matter of fact they do. Their highly accurate model is based on the premise that "You, your ship, and everything in it die/decay/degrade beyond functionality before you get 10% of the way to the nearest star". If any sentient life happens to be orbitting that star then in a few thousand years when your remains arrive they may end up as part of a museum exhibit or Black-Ops coverup.
Without FTL the only things we could possibly trade in are knowledge and culture. And with FTL... well if Einstein was r
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Well, yes and no.
Depending on how far "the next stellar system" is from start, and your acceleration, of course.
For 1G and 5 years, you'll go about 11 light years.
Beyond that distance, you'll add extra distance very quickly - 22 light years will take you 6.2 years. 100 light years will take 9 years.
And you can manage 11+ BILLION or so light years in only 45 years.
While this does theoretically allow traveel interstellar distances within a lifetime, for practical purposes (we don't really want to burn a
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An excellent breakdown - just don't forget you also need fuel, though I suppose a ramscoop plus mass-energy converter would let you sustain accelerations once you got up to speed. The fuel for that initial acceleration and deceleration is still going to be pretty mind-boggling though.
I agree it's plausible for colonization or exploration purposes, but for trade? Trade needs to be cost-effective, and those shipping costs are going to be killer...
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No, it's not worthwhile for trade, really. especially since no material good could possibly be worth shipping across interstellar distances. Trade, as such, would be trade in IDEAS, not things. And you can do that with a com laser.
As a completely off-topic aside: Is that dove EVER going to get laid? He's been chasing a dove hen around my b
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no known material good could possibly be worth shipping across interstellar distances.
See: Dune for an example.
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I imagine that without FTL it would be cheaper to synthesize spice than ship it a few lightyears. Billions or trillions of dollars per pound? That's getting into the range where you could potentially fine-tune your best attempt at chemical synthesis by using little laser "tractor beams" to add/remove individual atoms, and still have a huge profit margin.
Now maybe if it was some new element with "miraculous" properties - like say element 543 that's the critical component of an alien antigravity drive... B
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Gotta get that Alludium Phosdex. :)
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And your point is?
No, we can't do that right now. Noone has suggested that we can.
Does the fact we can't do it now mean it will be forever impossible? No. Lot of things we do do now would have been described as "impossible" 100 years ago.
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CrimsonAvenger did a great breakdown of time versus acceleration, so I'll just throw out a second factor: we can't actually pull off that kind of acceleration with any current (even speculative) fuel technology. Consider the size of the rockets used for orbital launches, just to accelerate a few thousand g at a few G for several minutes. Now increase that a few thousandfold to keep it up for a year. Except... it's even worse than that - far, far worse, because the fuel required for sustained acceleration
internal detection (Score:5, Funny)
the big question is are entities in the simulation able to detect it is a simulation.
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We got to the end, and all we saw was:
4000000 GOTO 10
Re: internal detection (Score:2)
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You are presuming, of course, an absence of sentient galactic clusters. Why must you be such a scale-ist?
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You are of course aware of that whooshing sound.
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Yes, because they keep getting our spam.
That depends (Score:1)
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A more interesting thing, I think, would be to start with the universe we observe, and then run the simulation backwards to find out what initial conditions are necessary to create it. After all the equations are all fully reversible.
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After all the equations are all fully reversible.
Most likely not in this case. I don't have access to the original article at my current location, but many other hydrodynamic cosmology models are not reversible because they result in an increase of entropy and a smoothing process that does not allow that to work backwards, which is kind of how reality is unless you are modelling every particle of gas clouds.
What is Systems science? (Score:2)
Always seemed a bit like CS masturbation to me.
Nice troll, here's your cookie.
Next time you go to the airport think about the following. The skyscrapers you pass, the bridges you cross, the car you ride in, the multi-level car park you park in, the plane you board were all designed with CS masturbation. The fact that over the last 30yrs (about half of my life time) it's become virtually impossible to get finance for any engineering projects without first performing CS masturbation is testament to it's power and utility. Numerical integration [wikipedia.org] is what
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Excellent post.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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That's the point. If the simulation differs, then something about actual natural law hasn't been properly translated into code. The interesting part is, if what we think we know _has_ been properly translated, then what we think we know may be wrong. The more common case, of course, is that the code has a glitch.
simulating a phenomena does not validate the model (Score:4, Interesting)
Choosing parameters that best simulate a model does not mean that model is correct.
Great news! (Score:1)
Finally I'll be able to make an apple pie from scratch!
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Finally I'll be able to make an apple pie from scratch!
Obscure Cosmos reference is obscure.
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Re:simulating a phenomena does not validate the mo (Score:5, Informative)
If there are parameters for a model that allow the model to simulate reality, then the model may be correct, but may still be incorrect.
This work moves us from the first state to the second, at least when it comes to simulating rather large scale structure.
Model dependent reality (Score:2)
By definition there is no point in space outside the Universe, and we still can't even observe our home galaxy from the outs
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You mean my RC plane is not really governed by regression equations? Shit, there goes my Nobel!
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When the parameters match observed conditions it does.
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Science says you should be able to make predictions, so that the theory is valid. Matching observations in a model based on theories built to explain those same observations is circular reasoning.
This does not mean they are not on the right path, of course.
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The observations their model makes are different from the observations used to construct the model.
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This does not mean they are not on the right path, of course
Indeed, when talking about the accuracy of any scientific theory (model) it should be noted that imperfect ce
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Their parameters aren't simply chosen, though: most of them come from a disparate range of experimental observations, and the remainder are constrained to reasonable values. Getting experiment out with experiment in, particularly when it's a range of different experiment types in each case, is strong evidence that a model is accurate.
"The free parameters of our model are set to physically plausible values and have been adjusted within the allowed range to roughly reproduce the relation between mean stellar
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Do you just not understand what models are, how the work, and how to validate them? Is that why you just throw out that meaningless sentence?
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No, but if you can't find parameters that make a model behave similarly to reality, that's evidence that the model is incorrect. This is science: all we can do is try to find evidence that shows that models are incorrect and try to make new models.
The success of the simulation shows that the theories are consistent and may be complete (in the sense that other theories are not required) to the limits of the simulation, observation, and agreement. This is evidence that the theories aren't incorrect and
Obligatory (Score:2)
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Actually that was a rounding error, the correct value is 947.2837289373726376152839
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God is MS-Excel? We're fucked
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Re:really? (Score:4, Interesting)
and apparently also know (without sharing) why the observed mass of the Higgs boson is so tiny even though the max energy times the fermion/boson sum should be huge. wow they have it all figured out...or they "cooked the books"
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It's a cosmological model, the Higgs doesn't enter into it. It's gravity and hydrodynamics.
Funny (Score:3, Insightful)
I love the part about "new questions to answer". As if "Where did the super dense mass the universe came from, come from, wouldn't be a good question to answer...
Confirmation bias. (Score:1)
Likelihood that we (Score:2)
are a feature of some other species' universe-simulation: high
So when... (Score:2)
So when are they releasing it as a game?
while digging through the simulation... (Score:2)
The simulation is uncanny! I noticed that there is only 1 planet with life on it!
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Link to a non-paywalled abstract (Score:1)
Hint to /. editors and submitters: when talking about physics and astronomy papers, it's really helpfu to remember the existence of the arxiv, where the actual professionals go to find the papers.
http://uk.arxiv.org/abs/1405.1418
(Also, hint to commenters on cosmology articles: saying things like "simulations are pointless because they're confirmation bias" and "but they don't understand dark matter LOLOLOLOLOL" just make you look woefully ill-educated in the area, even to the level that a cursory skim of Wi
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you could have saved us a lot of time then by pointing out how it is not pointless, unless your point is "it gives me funding".
basically, how is this on any fundamental level any more useful than the galaxies screen saver is?
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Fundamental understanding of things is what we use to create new thing, even thing we had no idea we could create when the fundamental research is done.
A good model will show us thing we didn't know would happen. Thing we can later confirm.
Title overstated (Score:3)
Probably a better one is "Simulation from the Big Bang results in output that looks like our universe at the galactic scale"
To suggest that this equals "Astrophysicists Build Realistic Virtual Universe" more than a touch hyperbolic.
Have they solved... (Score:2)
Have they solved the problem with quantum theory and the big bang being mutually exclusive (other than saying the laws of physics changed somehow)? If not, there is still a really big problem to solve.
Outer Limits: create universe in lab (Score:2)
Re:Keep adjusting until it looks right (Score:4, Informative)
Meanwhile, all you ever needed to do was read Genesis to understand what really happened.
Meh, Genesis were never the same since Peter Gabriel left...
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One of the rare instance in music were a break up spawns 2 greater groups.
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A whole lotta begatting, good times!