These are public posts tagged with #nbody. You can interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse.
A new paper by Lawler et al. has cited REBOUND:
LiDO: Exploring the Stable Plutino Parameter Space https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2025PSJ.....6..100L/abstract #nbody #astrodon
A new paper by Spada has cited REBOUND:
"Dark Comet" 2005 VL1 is Unlikely to be the Lost Soviet-era Probe Venera 2 https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2025RNAAS...9...58S/abstract #nbody #astrodon
A. Loeb & R. Cloete intriguingly suggest that the near-Earth…
ADSA new paper by Lawler et al. has cited REBOUND:
LiDO: Exploring the Stable Plutino Parameter Space https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2025arXiv250310847L/abstract #nbody #astrodon
Like in previous years, I'm only passively participating in #Genuary2024 and posting relevant existing experiments/sketches/pieces... Two more candidates (in addition to the recent boids work) incoming for the "Particles" prompt, incl. this first one from 20 years ago:
IdeaSpace - a cyclic universe (2004)
http://toxi.co.uk/p5/ideaspace/
"A space with a steadily increasing number of moving particles attracted by slowly moving, invisible gravitational centres. The cyclic nature of the space itself acts as four dimensional history, causing each particle to leave a persistent trace in time as well as in space. The paradoxical result of this setup is that whereas the number of particles is approaching infinity there's no increase in computational cost."
This piece was shown at my first solo show @ Mediaruimte, Brussels in 2004. It was started with a "small bang" event (in the sim) during the exhibition opening and by the time the show was finished 2 weeks later, the (sim) space was almost entirely white, almost completely filled with particles...
Ps. In the video: 1 rotation = 1 cycle of the simulated universe
#Vintage #GenerativeArt #Generative #Genuary2024 #Art #Particles #NBody #Gravity #Visualization #CyclicUniverse #ProcessingOrg
A n-body simulation I wrote using Aparapi. The red dots are high mass and the blue dots low mass. The system starts ordered but evolves into a beautiful natural looking orbit.