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Scientific inquiry has traditionally depended on modeling—developing representations (often simplified or scaled-down) of phenomena to enhance comprehension. Computing assists not just in building and statistically evaluating models, but also in depicting temporal changes, a vital factor for grasping and forecasting the dynamics of systems with multiple variables or interdependent components. Both natural and societal processes frequently involve numerous conditional events, and solving all the required mathematical equations to monitor them is typically unfeasible. However, numerical approximations exist and are integrated into computational simulation tools. Simulations exemplify computing's potential to drive revolutionary advancements in human understanding.
Modeling and simulation through computers can be effectively utilized across virtually all domains of human activity, aiding in the study of diverse subjects like peak-hour congestion, Ebola transmission patterns, protein molecular structures and their bodily interactions, hurricane trajectories, or subatomic particle behavior during the universe's formation.