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Galaxy Simulator

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Galaxy Simulator screenshot
Name: Galaxy Simulator
Works on: windowsWindows 7 and above
Developer: Dan Samuel
Version: 1
Last Updated: 23 Feb 2017
Release: 03 Apr 2009
Category: Multimedia > Graphic
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244 downloads
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Galaxy Simulator Details

Works on: Windows 10 | Windows 8.1 | Windows 8 | Windows 7 | Windows 2012
SHA1 Hash: 22b4436e9178641b67ed1da6c49c903a8f823c56
Size: 32.26 KB
File Format: exe
Rating: 1.826086956 out of 5 based on 23 user ratings
Downloads: 244
License: Free
Galaxy Simulator is a free software by Dan Samuel and works on Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows 2012.
You can download Galaxy Simulator which is 32.26 KB in size and belongs to the software category Graphic.
Galaxy Simulator was released on 2009-04-03 and last updated on our database on 2017-02-23 and is currently at version 1.
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Galaxy Simulator Description

The Galaxy Simulator application was designed to be a small tool that starts animating a universe of 200 stars, which runs in real time.
The name is probably a bit of an exaggeration, but basically it starts with a group of stars placed randomly in a 3D volume of space. Then it computes the gravitational attraction between all the stars and moves them all a little. Then it does it again.
Thats about it, really. I added some extras for fun (like making a movie since it *does* take awhile to compute a large enough number of stars.
And I am considering 2000 to be a large number, which is not really accurate in the galaxy sense, of course. But its a lot of little dots on your computer monitor.
My scientific goal for the program was to establish that given time, a random placement of stars would turn into a rotating disk (my hypothesis) and it more or less seems to be the case.
Since the stars start off at rest (yeah, yeah, I know that would make a nice feature addition to give them initial velocities), they are initially drawn to the center of mass of the universe, and a few encounter each other closely right away and are whipped outwards at high velocity.
The rest pass each other on their way through the center, bound out the far side, and eventually slow down and orbit the center. Eventually one plane becomes dominant (mainly by hurling out the stars which arent in it.) and then one direction of rotation dominates (took me over a week of computation to get to this point, and about half the stars had reached what appeared to be escape velocity in the process.)System requirementsPentium II 300MHz
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Galaxy Simulator Screenshots

Galaxy Simulator screenshot 1
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