Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. News

Researchers have simulated a virtual universe, and you can download it for free

Add as a preferred source on Google

If you’ve ever wanted to explore the entire universe from the comfort of your computer, now’s your chance. An international team has created the largest and most realistic virtual universe to date called Uchuu (which means “outer space” in Japanese), simulating 2.1 trillion particles in a computational cube which is a mind-bending 9.63 billion light-years wide on each side.

世界最大規模の”模擬宇宙”を公開 ~ 宇宙の大規模構造と銀河形成の解明に向けて ~

The simulation was created using the supercomputer ATERUI II, which is dedicated to astronomy projects. The supercomputer located in Iwate, Japan, has a peak performance of over 3 Pflops, but even with all this power it still took a whole year to crunch through all of the data and create the simulation.

The Uchuu simulation, the most detailed simulation of the universe to date.
The Uchuu simulation, the most detailed simulation of the universe to date. Simulation: Tomoaki Ishiyama; Visualization: Hirotaka Nakayama; 4D2U Project, NAOJ

“To produce Uchuu we have used … all 40,200 processors (CPU cores) available exclusively for 48 hours each month,” said Tomoaki Ishiyama, an associate professor at Chiba University who developed the code for the project. “Twenty million supercomputer hours were consumed, and 3 Petabytes of data were generated, the equivalent of 894,784,853 pictures from a 12-megapixel cell phone.”

Recommended Videos

The simulation looks at halos of dark matter which are huge-scale structures that could tell us about the formation of galaxies and the early universe. The large-scale nature of the simulation makes it a valuable tool for studying how the universe evolved over time, as it shows very distant regions which represent early stages in the life of the universe.

“Uchuu is like a time machine,” said Julia F. Ereza, a Ph.D. student at Instituto Astrofísica Andalucía in Spain who uses Uchuu. “We can go forward, backward and stop in time, we can ‘zoom in’ on a single galaxy or ‘zoom out’ to visualize a whole cluster, we can see what is really happening at every instant and in every place of the Universe from its earliest days to the present, being an essential tool to study the Cosmos.”

And yes, should you want to experience the wonder of exploring the entire (virtual) universe for yourself, then you can, as the team has made the entire simulation available for free download to anyone who wants it. Though fair warning — even compressed, the simulation takes up 100 terabytes, so you’ll need some serious hard drive space available.

To download the simulation and to find out more about interacting with it, you can head to the Uchuu simulation website and its related GitHub page. The group is also planning to release more data in the future, including catalogs of virtual galaxies and gravitational lensing maps.

The research is published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Amazon’s Starlink rival is set to launch satellite internet later this year
After launching nearly 400 satellites, Amazon says its Leo broadband service will go live later this year.
Atlas V launches 29 Amazon Leo satellites from Cape Canaveral, Florida

Amazon's long-awaited answer to SpaceX's Starlink is finally nearing liftoff. According to an exclusive report from Reuters, the company plans to begin offering its Leo satellite internet service later this year, after its latest rocket launch pushed the constellation to 394 satellites in orbit.

The pieces are finally falling into place for Project Kuiper

Read more
NASA is investing $590 million in private contractors to build humanity’s first Moon outpost
NASA is counting on private companies to land its Moon Base dream.
Artist impression of a Moon Base concept, with solar arrays for energy generation, greenhouses for food production, and habitats shielded with regolith.

Building a permanent base on the Moon sounds like science fiction, but NASA is making it feel a lot more real. The agency just handed $590 million in contracts to three private companies for four uncrewed lunar lander missions launching in late 2028.

These missions are part of Phase 1 of NASA's broader $30 billion Moon Base program, which needs to deliver landers, rovers, and scientific cargo up there before astronauts eventually move in. These efforts are closely tied NASA's Artemis program, which sent humans on a lunar flyby in April for the first time since the Apollo era.

Read more
Getting to Mars may require a pit stop in orbit, and NASA just tested the nozzle to make that happen
A gas pump nozzle for spacecraft sounds simple. It is not, and that's what makes this test worth paying attention to.
Architecture, Building, Factory

Getting a spacecraft to Mars or beyond requires an enormous amount of fuel, most of which has to be hauled from Earth, adding to the overall cost and weight of the spacecraft. NASA has been working on a different approach, one that could be more efficient and effective.

It wants to refuel a spacecraft in orbit before heading out for the mission. What’s even more interesting is that the space agency just finished testing a component that could make that possible: a cryocoupler.

Read more