Researchers at the University of Arizona have created an artificial simulation of the universe using the power of supercomputers. Scientists have been able to create over a million simulations to observe important aspects of astronomy.
What is still a mystery to researchers about black holes is how, when, and why black holes formed and how they grow. The most amazing thing about black holes is that no matter or light can escape from them.
“We thought it would be impossible to measure how black holes formed,” said Peter Behruzi, an associate professor at the University of Arizona’s Steward Observatory and a project researcher at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ).
Scientists were also very interested in the universe before the creation of black holes. Millions of computer simulations of the universe show that supermassive black holes grow at the same rate as the galaxies that host them.
However, although scientists have believed this to be true for almost 20 years, it has not yet been possible to prove it 100%. As galaxies grow from small to large, black holes grow. This is exactly how galaxies across the universe seem to behave.
They have tried to explain these simulations by various theories. Researchers named this projector Trinity. The main subject of the projector’s research is the galaxy. Supermassive Black Holes and Dark Matter. However, understanding the relationship of black holes with galaxies is still very difficult for scientists.