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How is it to work in numerical relativity?
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[QUOTE="phyzguy, post: 6065245, member: 237160"] I don't work in numerical relativity, but I have worked in numerical simulations in several other areas of physics. I can almost guarantee that the problems you will wrestle with on a daily basis will be almost entirely related to numerics and coding. Insights in fundamental physics will be few and far between. As Edison said, "Genius is one percent inspiration, ninety-nine percent perspiration". I think this is true in any field. Much of what you do on a daily basis is "grunt work". In my opinion, this doesn't make the work less enjoyable or less rewarding. On the contrary, when you achieve a new result, the fact that you have slogged through hundreds of trivial details to get there makes it all the more rewarding. [/QUOTE]
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How is it to work in numerical relativity?
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