List of Footnotes

1 Estimated from figures.
2 For Wmax = 50.
3 For Wmax = 50.
4 Estimated from figures.
5 Estimated from figures.
6 Estimated from figures.
7 Including points at shock transition.
8 Estimated from figures.
9 Maximum error.
10 For a Riemann problem with slightly different initial conditions.
11 For a Riemann problem with slightly different initial conditions including a nonzero transverse magnetic field.
12 All methods produce stable profiles without numerical oscillations. Comments to Martí et al. (1997) and Font et al. (1999) refer to 1D, only.
13 For a Riemann problem with slightly different initial conditions.
14 At t = 0.15.
15 For a mesh of 800 zones.
16 For a mesh of 800 zones.
17 D: excessive dissipation; O: oscillations; SE: systematic errors.
18 All finite difference methods are extended by directional splitting.
19 cAV-mono code [10Jump To The Next Citation Point] has improved the performance of explicit artificial-viscosity methods in dealing with ultra-relatistic flows, although the results are far from satisfactory.
20 Contains all the methods listed in Table 3 (using characteristic information) with exception of rGlimm [295].
21 Methods based on a exact relativistic Riemann solver can make use of the solution for non-zero transverse speeds [235].
22 There exist GRHD extensions of several HRSC methods based on linearized Riemann solvers. The procedure developed by Pons et al. [234Jump To The Next Citation Point] allows any SRHD Riemann solver to be applied to GRHD flows.
23 Important advances [143Jump To The Next Citation Point, 14Jump To The Next Citation Point] although only partial success up to now.
24 Only accomplished by second-order methods [138Jump To The Next Citation Point, 10].
25 Needs confirmation.
26 [150, 262, 204Jump To The Next Citation Point].
27 There is one code which considered such an extension [172Jump To The Next Citation Point], but the results are not completely satisfactory.