gmx vanhove¶
Synopsis¶
gmx vanhove [-f [<.xtc/.trr/...>]] [-s [<.tpr/.gro/...>]] [-n [<.ndx>]]
[-om [<.xpm>]] [-or [<.xvg>]] [-ot [<.xvg>]] [-b <time>]
[-e <time>] [-dt <time>] [-[no]w] [-xvg <enum>]
[-sqrt <real>] [-fm <int>] [-rmax <real>] [-rbin <real>]
[-mmax <real>] [-nlevels <int>] [-nr <int>] [-fr <int>]
[-rt <real>] [-ft <int>]
Description¶
gmx vanhove computes the Van Hove correlation function.
The Van Hove G(r,t) is the probability that a particle that is at r_0
at time zero can be found at position r_0+r at time t.
gmx vanhove determines G not for a vector r, but for the length of r.
Thus it gives the probability that a particle moves a distance of r
in time t.
Jumps across the periodic boundaries are removed.
Corrections are made for scaling due to isotropic
or anisotropic pressure coupling.
With option -om the whole matrix can be written as a function
of t and r or as a function of sqrt(t) and r (option -sqrt).
With option -or the Van Hove function is plotted for one
or more values of t. Option -nr sets the number of times,
option -fr the number spacing between the times.
The binwidth is set with option -rbin. The number of bins
is determined automatically.
With option -ot the integral up to a certain distance
(option -rt) is plotted as a function of time.
For all frames that are read the coordinates of the selected particles
are stored in memory. Therefore the program may use a lot of memory.
For options -om and -ot the program may be slow.
This is because the calculation scales as the number of frames times
-fm or -ft.
Note that with the -dt option the memory usage and calculation
time can be reduced.
Options¶
Options to specify input files:
-f[<.xtc/.trr/…>] (traj.xtc)-s[<.tpr/.gro/…>] (topol.tpr)-n[<.ndx>] (index.ndx) (Optional)Index file
Options to specify output files:
-om[<.xpm>] (vanhove.xpm) (Optional)X PixMap compatible matrix file
-or[<.xvg>] (vanhove_r.xvg) (Optional)xvgr/xmgr file
-ot[<.xvg>] (vanhove_t.xvg) (Optional)xvgr/xmgr file
Other options:
-b<time> (0)Time of first frame to read from trajectory (default unit ps)
-e<time> (0)Time of last frame to read from trajectory (default unit ps)
-dt<time> (0)Only use frame when t MOD dt = first time (default unit ps)
-[no]w(no)-xvg<enum> (xmgrace)xvg plot formatting: xmgrace, xmgr, none
-sqrt<real> (0)Use sqrt(t) on the matrix axis which binspacing # in sqrt(ps)
-fm<int> (0)Number of frames in the matrix, 0 is plot all
-rmax<real> (2)Maximum r in the matrix (nm)
-rbin<real> (0.01)Binwidth in the matrix and for
-or(nm)-mmax<real> (0)Maximum density in the matrix, 0 is calculate (1/nm)
-nlevels<int> (81)Number of levels in the matrix
-nr<int> (1)Number of curves for the
-oroutput-fr<int> (0)Frame spacing for the
-oroutput-rt<real> (0)Integration limit for the
-otoutput (nm)-ft<int> (0)Number of frames in the
-otoutput, 0 is plot all