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What Lights the Universe’s Standard Candles? (quantamagazine.org)
75 points by Amorymeltzer on Feb 17, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments



Astrophysical and cosmological simulations are often insightful. They're also very cross-disciplinary; besides the obvious astrophysics, there's networking and sysadmin, parallel computing and algorithm theory (so that the simulation programs are actually fast but still accurate), systems design, and even a bit of graphic design for the visualisations.

Some of my favourite simulation projects:

- IllustrisTNG: https://www.tng-project.org/

- SWIFT: https://swift.dur.ac.uk/

- CO5BOLD: https://www.astro.uu.se/~bf/co5bold_main.html (which produced these animations of a red-giant star: https://www.astro.uu.se/~bf/movie/AGBmovie.html)

- AbacusSummit: https://abacussummit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

And I can add the simulations in the article, too.


Supernova simulations are especially interesting too. I have heard them described as the only time in physics when all 4 of the fundamental forces are important. The explosion can be quite finicky too. If I remember right, you can't get supernova to explode properly in 1D simulations, only in higher dimensions. This was a mystery until the realization that turbulence is necessary for supernova to trigger--there is no turbulent flow in 1D.


Whoa. I didn't know the accretion theory of Ia supernovae was dead, much less that it had been since 2011.



Wouldn't double detonation show up as variance in the brightness?


Or widening of the peak. If one type Ia supernova goes 1,2,3,2,1, the sum of two could go

    1+0=1
    2+1=3
    3+2=5
    2+3=5
    1+2=3
    0+1=1




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