Next: Introduction
 Up: NAMD 2.10b1 User's Guide
 Previous: Contents
     Contents 
     Index 
- Graph of van der Waals potential with and without switching
 - Graph of electrostatic potential with and without shifting function
 - Graph of electrostatic split between short and long range forces
 - Example of cutoff and pairlist distance uses
 - Graph showing a slice of a ramp potential, showing the effect of 
           mgridforcevoff
 - Graphical representation of a collective variables configuration
    The colvar called ``
'' is defined as the difference between two distances: the first distance (
) is taken between the center of mass of atoms 1 and 2 and that of atoms 3 to 5, the second (
) between atom 7 and the center of mass of atoms 8 to 10.
The difference 
 is obtained by multiplying the two by a coefficient 
 or 
, respectively.
The colvar called ``
'' is the coordination number calculated between atoms 1 to 10 and atoms 11 to 20.  A harmonic restraint is applied to both 
 and 
: to allow using the same force constant 
, both 
 and 
 are scaled by their respective fluctuation widths 
 and 
.
A third colvar ``alpha'' is defined as the 
-helical content of residues 1 to 10.
The values of ``
'' and ``alpha'' are also recorded throughout the simulation as a joint 2-dimensional histogram.
 - Dual topology description for an alchemical simulation.
           Case example of the mutation of alanine into serine.
           The lighter color denotes the non-interacting, alternate
           state.
 - Convergence of an FEP calculation. If the ensembles representative
           of states 
 and 
 are too disparate, equation (59) will
           not converge (a).
           If, in sharp contrast, the configurations of
           state 
 form a subset of the ensemble of configurations
           characteristic of state 
, the simulation is expected
           to converge (b).
           The difficulties reflected in case (a) may be
           alleviated by the introduction of mutually overlapping intermediate
           states that connect 
 to 
 (c). It should be
           mentioned that in practice, the kinetic contribution, 
,
           is assumed to be identical for state 
 and state 
.
 - Relationship of user-defined 
 to coupling of electrostatic or vdW interactions to a simulation, given specific values of alchElecLambdaStart or alchVdwLambdaEnd.
 - Sample TI data (
 against 
). The blue shaded
  area shows the integral with fine sampling close to the end point. The red area
  shows the difference when 
 values are more sparse. In this example,
  insufficient sampling before 
 
0.1 can result in a large overestimation
  of the integral. Beyond 
0.2, sparser sampling is justified as dE/d
 is not
  changing quickly.
 - Schematics of the aMD method. When the original potential (thick line) falls below a threshold energy 
 (dashed line),
          a boost potential is added. The modified energy profiles (thin lines) have smaller barriers separating adjacent
	  energy basins. 
	   
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/