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computer simulation |
Also found in: Wikipedia | 0.02 sec. |
computer simulationRepresentation of a real-life situation in a computer program. For example, the program might simulate the flow of customers arriving at a bank. The user can alter variables, such as the number of cashiers on duty, and see the effect. More complex simulations can model the behaviour of chemical reactions or even nuclear explosions. The behaviour of solids and liquids at high temperatures can be simulated using quantum simulation. Computers also control the actions of machines – for example, a flight simulator models the behaviour of real aircraft and allows training to take place in safety. Computer simulations are very useful when it is too dangerous, time consuming, or simply impossible to carry out a real experiment or test. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| Potential starship commanders had to complete the computer-simulated Kobayashi Maru exercise as a test of character. Indeed, the image reflects the computer-simulated planet orbits of the early solar system, not as the caption states, current orbits. Seventy minutes long, this slow-motion computer-simulated slide dissolve of all 116 well-traveled pictures reveals a fascinating time capsule, an extraordinary (and extraordinarily skewed) portrait-by-committee of the planet we call home. |
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