English

The IllustrisTNG Simulations: Public Data Release

Astrophysics of Galaxies 2021-02-01 v3 Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics

Abstract

We present the full public release of all data from the TNG50, TNG100 and TNG300 simulations of the IllustrisTNG project. IllustrisTNG is a suite of large volume, cosmological, gravo-magnetohydrodynamical simulations run with the moving-mesh code Arepo. TNG includes a comprehensive model for galaxy formation physics, and each TNG simulation self-consistently solves for the coupled evolution of dark matter, cosmic gas, luminous stars, and supermassive blackholes from early time to the present day, z=0. Each of the flagship runs -- TNG50, TNG100, and TNG300 -- are accompanied by lower-resolution and dark-matter only counterparts, and we discuss scientific and numerical cautions and caveats relevant when using TNG. Full volume snapshots are available at 100 redshifts; halo and subhalo catalogs at each snapshot and merger trees are also released. The data volume now directly accessible online is ~1.1 PB, including 2,000 full volume snapshots and ~110,000 high time-resolution subbox snapshots. Data access and analysis examples are available in IDL, Python, and Matlab. We describe improvements and new functionality in the web-based API, including on-demand visualization and analysis of galaxies and halos, exploratory plotting of scaling relations and other relationships between galactic and halo properties, and a new JupyterLab interface. This provides an online, browser-based, near-native data analysis platform which supports user computation with fully local access to TNG data, alleviating the need to download large simulated datasets.

Cite

@article{arxiv.1812.05609,
  title  = {The IllustrisTNG Simulations: Public Data Release},
  author = {Dylan Nelson and Volker Springel and Annalisa Pillepich and Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez and Paul Torrey and Shy Genel and Mark Vogelsberger and Ruediger Pakmor and Federico Marinacci and Rainer Weinberger and Luke Kelley and Mark Lovell and Benedikt Diemer and Lars Hernquist},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.05609},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

TNG50 joins TNG100 and TNG300 in public release (1 Feb 2021) at http://www.tng-project.org/data

R2 v1 2026-06-23T06:41:52.601Z