[Commits] [svn:einsteintoolkit] Paper_EinsteinToolkit_2010/ (Rev. 8)

knarf at cct.lsu.edu knarf at cct.lsu.edu
Wed Jan 19 15:39:18 CST 2011


User: knarf
Date: 2011/01/19 03:39 PM

Modified:
 /
  ET.tex

Log:
 move paragraph

File Changes:

Directory: /
============

File [modified]: ET.tex
Delta lines: +12 -14
===================================================================
--- ET.tex	2011-01-18 16:01:24 UTC (rev 7)
+++ ET.tex	2011-01-19 21:39:18 UTC (rev 8)
@@ -265,6 +265,18 @@
 \S\ref{broader} describes the growing impact of Cactus in other
 application domains.
 
+The Cactus Framework was developed by the
+numerical relativity community, and although it is a general component
+framework that supports different application domains its core user
+group has remained from numerical relativity. The Cactus team has
+traditionally developed and supported a set of core modules for numerical
+relativity, as part of the {\tt CactusEinstein} arrangement. Over the
+last few years however, the relevance of many of the modules has declined,
+and more and more of the basic infrastructure for numerical relativity
+has been provided by open modules provided and distributed by research
+groups in the community. 
+The Einstein Toolkit now collects the widely used parts of CactusEinstein,
+combined with contributions from the community.
 
 \subsection{Carpet Mesh Refinement}
 \todo{Erik}
@@ -289,21 +301,7 @@
 source and is openly developed, with the main development located at
 LSU (co-PI Schnetter) and contributions from AEI and others.
 
-\subsection{CactusEinstein} \todo{remove extra subsection for this,
-move further up} The Cactus Framework was developed by the
-numerical relativity community, and although it is a general component
-framework that supports different application domains its core user
-group has remained from numerical relativity. The Cactus Team have
-traditionally developed and supported a set of core modules for numerical
-relativity, as part of the {\tt CactusEinstein} arrangement. Over the
-last few years however, the relevance of many of the modules has declined,
-and more and more of the basic infrastructure for numerical relativity
-has been provided by open modules provided and distributed by research
-groups in the community. 
 
-The Einstein Toolkit collects the widely used parts of CactusEinstein,
-combined with contributions from the community.
-
 \subsection{Simulation Factory}
 \todo{Erik}
 



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