Universe Sandbox

Universe Sandbox

Developer(s) Dan Dixon, Christian Herold, Georg Steinröhder, Thomas Grønneløv, Eric Hilton, Naomi Goldenson, Chad Jenkins
Initial release May 2008 (2008-05)
Stable release
2.2 / October 1, 2012
Operating system Windows
Platform PC
Type Educational software
License Proprietary commercial software
Website universesandbox.com

Universe Sandbox is an interactive space and gravity simulator. Using Universe Sandbox, one can see the effects of gravity on objects in the universe and run scale simulations of our Solar System, various galaxies or other simulations, while at the same time interacting and maintaining control over gravity, time, and other objects in the universe (moons, planets, asteroids, comets, black holes, etc.).[1] The original Universe Sandbox is only available for Windows-based PCs, but the new version Universe Sandbox² is on Windows, OS X, and GNU/Linux.

Universe Sandbox was designed and developed by Dan Dixon, who worked on this educational project for over fifteen years before launching version 1.0 in May 2008.[2] Universe Sandbox version 2.0 was released on May 2, 2010. Version 2.1 was released on Steam on Friday April 29, 2011.

Dan worked full-time on the project since 2010, and in 2011, he founded the company Giant Army (named after the metaphor of standing on the shoulders of giants). Since then he has hired six additional developers; first Christian Herold and Georg Steinröhder in 2011, then Thomas Grønneløv and Eric Hilton in 2012. Naomi Goldenson joined in 2013 and Chad Jenkins in 2014.[3][4] Christian works on the architecture and user interface, Georg works on the graphics, Thomas works on implementing physics and mathematics libraries and Eric, who is an astronomer, works on ensuring that the simulated universe is plausible. Naomi implements climate modeling and Chad tackles planetary material composition.

As of 2014, the developers are working on a new complete rewrite of Universe Sandbox, called Universe Sandbox ². Some of the new features include atmospheres being shown on planets, dynamic and procedurally generated textures on stars and gas giants, a more realistic and graphic collision system, 3D charts in chart mode, simulation of stellar evolution, procedural detail in rings/particles, visualization of black holes, tethers to build space elevators, simulation of fluid-like objects (such as gas clouds, nebulae and protoplanetary disks, and planetary collisions) and much more.

Simulations

Many simulations are included with Universe Sandbox, both realistic and fictional simulations:

Universe Sandbox ²

Universe Sandbox ²
Developer(s) Dan Dixon (leader), Christian Herold, Georg Steinröhder, Thomas Grønneløv, Eric Hilton, Naomi Goldenson, Chad Jenkins
Initial release August 24, 2015 (2015-08-24) (early access)
Stable release
Alpha 19 / November 2016
Operating system Windows, OS X, Linux
Platform PC, Mac
Type Educational software
License Proprietary commercial software
Website universesandbox.com/2/

As of 2014, the developers are working on a new complete rewrite of Universe Sandbox. Some of the new features include atmospheres being shown on planets, dynamic and procedurally generated textures on stars and gas giants, a more realistic and graphic collision system, 3D charts in chart mode, simulation of stellar evolution, procedural detail in rings/particles, visualization of black holes, simulation of fluid-like objects (such as gas clouds, nebulae and protoplanetary disks, and planetary collisions) and much more.[4]

The developers demonstrated many of these features at the Unite 2012 conference (for developers using the Unity game engine).[4]

There is no planned release date for the final version of Universe Sandbox ², but in late August 2014 the public alpha version was released for purchase by the public, after having been in closed alpha testing for several months. Purchase of the alpha will give access to continuous updates as well as the final version.

Alpha releases

Version[5] Date[5] New features / Notes[5]
Alpha 1 December 4, 2013
Alpha 2 December 13, 2013 Improved ring particle collisions
Alpha 3 December 24, 2013
Alpha 4 January 22, 2014
Alpha 5 March 6, 2014 Improved stellar flares, graphing tools
Alpha 6 March 22, 2014
Alpha 7 June 20, 2014 Overhauled collision system, improved climate modeling
Alpha 8 August 6, 2014 Save and load simulations.
Alpha 8.3 August 11, 2014
Alpha 9 August 22, 2014 Bug fixes and minor improvements. New logo
Alpha 9.1 August 23, 2014
Alpha 9.2 August 24, 2014
Alpha 10 August 25, 2014 Game made available for purchase
Alpha 10.1 August 28, 2014
Alpha 11 September 18, 2014 Shockwaves on collisions, improved supernovas
Alpha 12 October 30, 2014 UI improvements
Alpha 13 February 5, 2015 Overhauled collisions, Mars climate, planetary cutaways
Alpha 13.1 February 6, 2015 Bug fixes
Alpha 14 March 1, 2015
Alpha 15 June 19, 2015 New UI, including screenshot preview abilities. New magnetic field, etc.[6][7]
Alpha 15.1 March 1, 2015 Reedited texture of Ceres, new random asteroid feature, etc.
Alpha 15.2 July 9, 2015 The Pluto Encounter update.[8]
Alpha 15.9 August 21, 2015 Alpha 16 Preview with rewritten rendering.
Alpha 16 August 24, 2015 Universe Sandbox ² is now Early Access on Steam
Alpha 16.1 September 12, 2015
Alpha 16.2 October 12, 2015
Alpha 17 November 17, 2015 Stars Glows & The Likelihood of Life update
Alpha 18 December 23, 2015 Much Faster Physics update
Alpha 18.1 January 8, 2016 Faster Physics for Mac & Linux
Alpha 18.2 January 22, 2016 Planet Nine update
Alpha 18.2c April 5, 2016 Universe Sandbox ² is now in VR for the HTC Vive
Alpha 19 November 9, 2016 Disintegration update

Features

Key features of Universe Sandbox as of version 2.0:[9]

In the media

Universe Sandbox was used for several of the gravity simulations of galaxies colliding in a galaxy series special, "Cosmic Collisions", which first aired on January 28, 2009 on the Discovery Channel. (The second animation in this particular video was created using Universe Sandbox.)[11]

See also

References

  1. "Universe Sandbox". Universe Sandbox. Giant Army. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  2. Alex Cox (2008-10-05). "How one man created his own universe - How Dan Dixon fashioned a whole universe out of mere bytes". PC Plus, Issue 274 and techradar.com - computing news. Retrieved 2010-01-10.
  3. "we make Universe Sandbox". Giant Army. Retrieved 2014-07-07.
  4. 1 2 3 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 14, 2012. Retrieved September 12, 2012.
  5. 1 2 3 http://universesandbox.com/forum/index.php/board,13.0.html
  6. "New UI Screenshot & Alpha 15 Update". Universe Sandbox. Retrieved 16 May 2015.
  7. "Alpha 15 Now Available". Universe Sandbox 2. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  8. "Universe Sandbox ² Alpha 15.2 - The Pluto Encounter Update". Universe Sandbox. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  9. "Universe Sandbox ²". Universe Sandbox. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  10. http://www.dlp.com/hdtv/dlp-features/3d-hdtv.aspx
  11. Dan Evans (2009). "Cosmic Collisions". Discovery Channel. Retrieved 2010-01-10 via Vimeo.
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