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More about CloudyCloudy's FAQ page Publications acknowledging the use of Cloudy The style convention used in developing Cloudy. Developing Cloudy here in Lexington What the version numbers mean and why they change. People in the project Cloudy's origins, and all about computing in Cambridge in the late 1970s My notes on converting a large Fortran program to C are here Reliability in the Face of Complexity - the Challenge of High-end Scientific Programming, 2001, by Gary Ferland, my contribution to "Spectroscopic challenges of photoionized plasmas", ASP Conference 247 PDF. This discusses methods to decrease the number of bugs in software. How to call a C program like Cloudy from Fortran. Software contributed to drive Cloudy - This includes Aaron Barth's Perl scripts, instructions for driving a C code from Fortran, and interactive wrappers by Henrik Spoon and Kevin Volk A set of Cloud images
Other linksLinks dedicated to Quantitative spectroscopy and atomic data Dima Verner's Atomic Data for Astrophysics Peter van Hoof's Atomic Line lists What is the difference between C III and C+2? Kirk Korista's Quasar Emission Line Grids Links dedicated to Computers The ISI listing of the most highly cited researchers in several branches of the sciences. The Commonwealth of Kentucky
Local MeetingsThe 2005 SELAC meeting in Lexington Plasma 2000 - The Challenge of High Resolution X-Ray through IR Plasma Spectroscopy Quasars and Cosmology The 1994 Lexington Meeting includes Bob Rubin's photos and a pointer to the published version of the meeting summary. The public lecture Bob Williams and Storey Musgrave gave at UK on HST and its repair.
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