agustrusher
agustrusher
925 / 35
19th Dec 2014
8th Jul 2019
I hope you enjoy the celestial show; it's worth the lag. Universe takes roughly 2-4 minutes to fully form and lasts a long time. It differs every replay. Inspired by the Illustris Project. Good music for this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7HM9DTgkCTI
space simulator bigbang universe explosion realistic star fusion matter neblua

Comments

  • Atomic10
    Atomic10
    26th Dec 2014
    waleed123: No, He doesn't fuse to H... When heat and pressure surround many H atoms, they collide, making He, and the He makes Li, Be, and so on. And when two atoms fuse, it creates the energy that feuls the star.
  • 2312352
    2312352
    26th Dec 2014
    Make* *comment to short*
  • 2312352
    2312352
    26th Dec 2014
    Waleed, helium dosnt fuse into hydrogen. Hydrogen fuses into helium, helium fuses into another element, and so on, til lit hit iron, then the star gos Ka-boom. If big enough iron core it might maske a black hole.
  • waleed123
    waleed123
    26th Dec 2014
    star core makes helium that fuses to hydrogen that burns up
  • Atomic10
    Atomic10
    26th Dec 2014
    Zaddy23: Another theory, is that, stars burn hydrogen to fuse and make energy, but after billions of years, that energy gets used up. And there's nothing else to fuse, and stars burn out. Leaving an empty, cold, dark place... Lol And one more theory thats like those two, exept, at the end, galaxies and everything start accelerating back to a center point, called the big crunch...
  • Atomic10
    Atomic10
    26th Dec 2014
    Zaddy23: ell, there'a a bunch of theories... One of them, is that the universe is expanding, and everything is getting farther away from us, and from anything else in the universe. Then after a few billion years, the universe will be an empty, cold, dark place.
  • Zaddy23
    Zaddy23
    26th Dec 2014
    When a star goes nova, I noticed it explodes along lines commonly 45 degrees away from eachother, either straight up, up-right, right etc. Any idea what causes this? Also, what exactly causes the universe to "die" eventually?
  • agustrusher
    agustrusher
    25th Dec 2014
    Doolittle, just interpret it the way you want to. If you agree with Metaforce, then by all means do so. I made this save with my own interpretation, aka the timeline, but if someone else sees it in a different way, that's fine. Thank you and enjoy!
  • Doolittle
    Doolittle
    25th Dec 2014
    metaforce is right, gravitons were present at the big bang, creating gravity
  • agustrusher
    agustrusher
    25th Dec 2014
    Metaforce, what you described is the creation of a new star, not a universe. The entire save is the universe, not the yellow blobs. Those are the stars. From your description, I assume the added gravitons made a new star, merged with an existing star then expired, making the larger star explode. Due to this, the ehol must have been activated, leading to phase 7, then it deactivated, and the leftover remnants of the star restarted the universe. Is this accurate? Or did I misinterpret your post?