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First published in 1989, this book is comprised of invited
contributions from speakers at the international workshop,
Frontiers in Numerical Relativity, held at the University of
Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, in May 1988. Advances in supercomputer
technology and computational algorithms have stimulated rapid
progress in attempts to understand, through numerical means, such
diverse phenomena as gravitational radiation emission from
astrophysical sources, the evolution of inhomogenous cosmologies
and its effects on nucleosynthesis, cosmic string interactions, the
formation of 'naked singularities' and the cosmic censorship
conjecture and the dynamics of black holes. The book should be of
interest to researchers and graduate students in the field of
general relativity, astrophysics and applied numerical analysis who
wish to understand developments in computer studies of general
relativity at the time of publication.
First published in 1989, this book is comprised of invited
contributions from speakers at the international workshop,
Frontiers in Numerical Relativity, held at the University of
Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, in May 1988. Advances in supercomputer
technology and computational algorithms have stimulated rapid
progress in attempts to understand, through numerical means, such
diverse phenomena as gravitational radiation emission from
astrophysical sources, the evolution of inhomogenous cosmologies
and its effects on nucleosynthesis, cosmic string interactions, the
formation of 'naked singularities' and the cosmic censorship
conjecture and the dynamics of black holes. The book should be of
interest to researchers and graduate students in the field of
general relativity, astrophysics and applied numerical analysis who
wish to understand developments in computer studies of general
relativity at the time of publication.
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