Gravitorium
A program for fun and education to simulate the movement of stars, planets and other bodies
under Newtonian gravitation.
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The prime purpose of Gravitorium is to let you play with ideas about gravity and gravitational systems. While it's not intended to be a highly accurate solar system simulator, at low speeds its accuracy is really pretty good, at least for modest periods of time (a hundred years or so). It is certainly good enough to get a good general impression of the likely course of events in a particular planetary system. And, best of all, it lets you "play universe creator". Throw in a few extra planets, add a black hole, set a comet plunging towards the Earth! Or create an entirely new solar system from scratch. Educators should find it a very useful tool for teaching physics and astronomy. There are two versions of this program: The shareware version, which I'm now calling Gravitorium Pro. This version has many, many enhancements over the freeware version (discussed below), including:
The freeware version, let's call it Gravitorium Lite, which is the first version I released, a couple of years ago. It remains as freeware but you are strongly encouraged to upgrade to Gravitorium Pro, which is shareware (at a very modest price). Your choices:
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Acknowledgements: Gravitorium was mainly written in Microsoft Visual Basic 6, with some components in Borland Delphi. The lovely graphics of planets and stars were created using Universe, a wonderful little program from Diard Software.