Institute for Advanced Study / Princeton University Joint Astrophysics Colloquium

Supercomputer Simulations of the Universe

Numerical simulations of cosmic structure formation have become a powerful tool in astrophysics. Starting right after the Big Bang, they predict the dark matter backbone of the cosmic web far into the non-linear regime and follow complex galaxy formation physics with constantly improving fidelity. In my talk, I will review the methodology and selected results of recent hydrodynamical galaxy formation simulations, such as the IllustrisTNG, MillenniumTNG, Auriga, and Thesan projects. In particular I will discuss some of the primary challenges in modelling strong, scale-dependent feedback processes that regulate star formation, and highlight the important roles played by supermassive black holes and, potentially, cosmic rays in galaxy formation. I will also discuss extremely large simulations and describe how they help to make reliable predictions for the impact of baryons and massive neutrinos on cosmological observables, effects that need to be understood to make full use of upcoming new survey data.

Date & Time

February 03, 2026 | 11:00am – 12:00pm
Add to calendar 02/03/2026 11:00 02/03/2026 12:00 Institute for Advanced Study / Princeton University Joint Astrophysics Colloquium use-title Topic: Supercomputer Simulations of the Universe Speakers: Volker Springel, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Garching More: https://www.ias.edu/sns/events/institute-advanced-study-princeton-university-joint-astrophysics-colloquium-121 Numerical simulations of cosmic structure formation have become a powerful tool in astrophysics. Starting right after the Big Bang, they predict the dark matter backbone of the cosmic web far into the non-linear regime and follow complex galaxy formation physics with constantly improving fidelity. In my talk, I will review the methodology and selected results of recent hydrodynamical galaxy formation simulations, such as the IllustrisTNG, MillenniumTNG, Auriga, and Thesan projects. In particular I will discuss some of the primary challenges in modelling strong, scale-dependent feedback processes that regulate star formation, and highlight the important roles played by supermassive black holes and, potentially, cosmic rays in galaxy formation. I will also discuss extremely large simulations and describe how they help to make reliable predictions for the impact of baryons and massive neutrinos on cosmological observables, effects that need to be understood to make full use of upcoming new survey data. Jadwin A10, Princeton University a7a99c3d46944b65a08073518d638c23

Location

Jadwin A10, Princeton University

Speakers

Volker Springel, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Garching

Notes

10:30am Coffee Grand Central in Peyton Hall, and we can walk over together to Jadwin A10 leaving at about 10:50.  
11:00am Lecture in Jadwin A10