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

  • NoName3905
    NoName3905
    1st Apr 2023
    i mean irl takes way longer for the universe to end but if u made it that long the universe would end IRL before this ends.
  • NoName3905
    NoName3905
    1st Apr 2023
    So cool an realistic!
  • MisterMaster
    MisterMaster
    8th Mar 2023
    I forced it to completely freeze by constantly sparking the e-hole. Then i added a bit of noble gas and it started again. Then i restarted the simulation and erased like 80% of GRVT. After 5 minutes it turned into the Sun-like star emitting photons
  • nottunge
    nottunge
    7th Mar 2023
    a real bhol appread and 2 stars destroyed it
  • LightningBMW
    LightningBMW
    24th Dec 2022
    P.S: these virtual particles also cause hawking radiation, where an electron-positron pair form next to a black hole, and one gets sucked in. Due to quantum entanglement (go look it up) this removes mass from inside the black hole to realise the partner of whatever unfortunate particle fell in
  • LightningBMW
    LightningBMW
    23rd Dec 2022
    just a nice lesson in quatnum physics for y'all
  • LightningBMW
    LightningBMW
    23rd Dec 2022
    This even counts for particles that dont exist, called "virtual particles", which are particles formed by an area of no energy splitting into two particles of opposite carge, polarity, etc. This means that energy can be created from nothing, as long as the total energy within the system remains zero.
  • LightningBMW
    LightningBMW
    23rd Dec 2022
    Also, Yes you can! quantum physics is a branch of physics that deals with the probabilities of particles being in certain places and interactions with quantum particles. Quantum physics states that inbetween "measurements" (interactions with other particles) anything could have happened to that particle as long as it keeps the outcome observerd at that second measurement.
  • LightningBMW
    LightningBMW
    23rd Dec 2022
    volcanoes123: notice the giant green blob at the start of the simulation? Idiot
  • volcanoes123
    volcanoes123
    14th Dec 2022
    you can't create somthing from nothing without some kind of force