Show HN: Gravity – interactive solar-system simulator, from Newton to Einstein
https://qunabu.github.io/Gravity/Reading stuff like this always makes me think "well that is fortunate." Of course there is survivorship bias so its not exactly surprising. But it also makes me wonder what could change the status quo.
I guess these are the things that could change it:
- suns becomes lighter (earth shoots into space)
- earth accelerates (earth shoots into space)
- sun becomes heavier (earth falls into sun)
- earth decelerates (earth falls into sun)
I guess in theory some large interstellar object could pass to close too earth and fling us off into space or into the sun.
I don't like the explicit split of Newtonian and relativistic gravity, this is often how it's presented in educational content, but it creates too much confusion; for instance it gives the illusion that they are somehow separate theories even though Newtonian gravity is a limiting case of Einsteinian gravity when v << c and gravitational fields are weak (see Poissons eq for Newtons gravitational potential.
Lastly, you should consider rendering spacetime similar to Alessandro Roussels spacetime visualization https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrwgIjBUYVc; probably the best and most innovative one I've seen.
I did laugh at how the Gravity built the Earth, with a tiny North America and all, and then as more mass was accumulated, North America got to get bigger and bigger and bigger!
(I thought the same: suspecting it's a kind of crossfade between accreting bodies and finished Earth.)
In any case, nice visualization.
How are you handling relativistic effects in the N-body simulation?
no computers, no calculators, barely working telescopes looking at the moons orbiting Jupiter
(don't be limited by episode title, lots of amazing astrophysics in there)