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Posted in Cosmology, Exo Planets, Information, Science
Tagged Cosmology, Exo Planets, Information, Science
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Exploring the dark universe at the speed of petaflops
An astonishing 95% of our universe is made of up dark energy and dark matter. Understanding the physics of this sector is the foremost challenge in cosmology today. Sophisticated simulations of the evolution of the universe play a crucial role.
The primary lens through which scientists look at the night sky is no longer only a telescope—it\’s also a supercomputer. The new and coming generations of supercomputers will finally be capable of modeling the universe in the detail and volume required by astronomical surveys of the sky that are now underway, or soon will be.
Scientists use large cosmological simulations to test theories about the structure of the universe and the evolution of the distribution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies. State-of-the-art supercomputers let cosmologists make predictions and test them against data from powerful telescopes and space probes. Two decades of surveying the sky have culminated in the celebrated Cosmological Standard Model. Yet two of the model\’s key pillars—dark matter and dark energy, together accounting for 95% of the universe—remain mysterious. A research team led by Argonne is tackling this mystery, aided by some of the world\’s fastest supercomputers.
To model the distribution of matter in the universe, the researchers are running some of the largest, most complex simulations of the large-scale structure of the universe ever undertaken.
The Argonne team has run a 1.1-trillion-particle simulation on half a million processor cores of Mira, Argonne\’s new Blue Gene/Q supercomputer. The team was among a few science teams from across the country to gain early access to the system, which is now online.
The power and speed of supercomputers and simulation codes have significantly advanced over the past decade. Mira enables cosmology runs with greater resolution and accuracy on much larger simulation volumes—giving researchers the ability to confront theory with observational data from wide-area cosmological surveys.
Exploring the cosmic structure of the dark universe is an enormously complex problem. As the universe expands, gravitational attraction causes matter to coalesce and form structures—first sheets, then filaments where the sheets intersect, and then clumps where the filaments meet. As time progresses, one can begin to see more clearly the basic structure of an enormous web of voids, filaments, and clumps. Simulations at Argonne have calculated this web-like structure, the so-called cosmic web, in a cube of simulated space more than 13 trillion light-years across.
Cog
The lifeforms of this small blue marble are a cog in the inner workings of this clock we like to call the UNIVERSE! We are all stars because our ingredients were cooked up in them giving us the right to stand tall in the face of an almost infinite home of treasures.
Posted in Cosmology, Information, Science, Thoughts
Tagged Cosmology, Information, Science, Thoughts
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