by rstevenson » Sat Jun 12, 2010 10:16 pm
For those who might be interested in running a simulation of a galaxy collision on your computer, and being able to change parameters to see how the result is affected, have a look
here. On that page you can view an on-line demo, and then download the free Mathematica Player application and the Colliding Galaxies simulation file to play with.
Colliding Galaxies is an extremely simple simulation, with the paths of the stars being affected only by the centers of gravity of the two galaxies, and not by other stars. But it's fun to try anyway.
I found settings which give a nice example of colliding galaxies clearly showing how stars get ripped out of the smaller galaxy and begin to orbit the larger one, but not in the same plane as the other stars in that larger one. From top to bottom the settings to see this are... 60,38,6,10,0.1,-50,50,50,0,0.16,0.12
Enjoy.
Rob
For those who might be interested in running a simulation of a galaxy collision on your computer, and being able to change parameters to see how the result is affected, have a look [url=http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/CollidingGalaxies/]here[/url]. On that page you can view an on-line demo, and then download the free Mathematica Player application and the Colliding Galaxies simulation file to play with.
Colliding Galaxies is an extremely simple simulation, with the paths of the stars being affected only by the centers of gravity of the two galaxies, and not by other stars. But it's fun to try anyway.
I found settings which give a nice example of colliding galaxies clearly showing how stars get ripped out of the smaller galaxy and begin to orbit the larger one, but not in the same plane as the other stars in that larger one. From top to bottom the settings to see this are... 60,38,6,10,0.1,-50,50,50,0,0.16,0.12
Enjoy.
Rob