Super Planet Crash is a physics simulation game where you can simulate colliding planets and other celestial bodies. Customize planets and simulate collisions to see the effects, learn about physics concepts, or just create interesting scenarios.
Super Planet Crash is a free physics simulation game developed by Stefano Meschiari and the educational group at the University of Texas at Austin. In the game, users can add planets, moons, asteroids, comets and other celestial bodies and simulate what happens when they collide.
The interface allows customizing the mass, velocity, rotation, density and other properties of celestial objects. After setting up a scenario, users can run the simulation to visually see the gravitational effects and collisions unfold. The physics engine powering Super Planet Crash incorporates concepts like gravity, momentum, density and more to create realistic interactions.
Super Planet Crash has educational applications for learning and experimenting with basic physics principles. Students can gain an intuitive feel for gravitational forces, inelastic collisions, rotation and momentum transfer. But the open-ended nature of Super Planet Crash also appeals to more casual users who enjoy creating imaginative scenarios and watching the visually compelling simulations.
With its combination of educational value and creative open-ended play, Super Planet Crash has become a popular physics sandbox application for students and science enthusiasts. The ability to rapidly set up scenarios by adding planets, asteroids, etc. and rerun simulations makes it an engaging physics experiment and learning tool.