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What should applying the Runge-Kutta-method 4 to a differential equation using a program be called? Does it qualify as "simulation"?

I'm asking because I'm writing a document for school, and now I'm not sure about what should be the title of the section in which I write a program to do RK4 on previously discussed equations and look at the results of putting different parameters into it.

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    I guess, a numerical analyst would say that he "solved the equation with the RK4 method".2012-03-06

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By applying RK4 to an ODE, one solves the equation numerically: that is, a numeric solution is obtained. It is implicitly understood that a numeric solution is a finite vector of floating-point reals, rather than a map from an interval $(a,b)$ to $\mathbb R$; it's a rather different kind of object. Both are called solutions, even though they are not the same. One says numeric solution and exact solution when disambiguation is necessary.

I would not use the word "simulation" for this purpose; it brings to mind simulation of a physical process by something less tangible. In a sense, numerical algorithms do the opposite of that.