An international research team led by Japan’s RIKEN institute has created the most detailed and fastest simulation of the Milky Way ever produced a groundbreaking model powered by advanced artificial intelligence. The project maps 100 billion star particles, matching the estimated number of stars in our galaxy.
Researchers say this achievement was made possible by combining machine learning algorithms with traditional numerical models, allowing the simulation to run at speeds never reached before. The new system is reported to be 100 times faster than earlier high resolution simulations.
Previously, even the most powerful models struggled to simulate one million years of the galaxy’s evolution, taking nearly 315 hours, and a full billion-year simulation required an unimaginable 36 years of computing time.
But the new AI supported supercomputer system cuts that time dramatically. Now, one million years of galactic evolution can be simulated in just 2.7 hours, and one billion years in only 115 days, making long-term galactic studies finally achievable.
The research, led by Keiya Hirashima of the RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences, marks a major leap forward for astronomy. Scientists believe this model could transform our understanding of how the Milky Way formed, how it has changed over billions of years, and how the conditions for life emerged within it.
According to the team, this breakthrough shows how AI is no longer just a tool for recognition, but a powerful engine capable of overcoming scientific barriers once considered unreachable.
The success points to a new era in space research one where artificial intelligence helps humanity explore the deepest mysteries of our galaxy faster, clearer, and more accurately than ever before.
