Amber 2022
Books | Computers / Business & Productivity Software / General
David A. Case
H. Metin Aktulga
Kellon Belfon
Ido Ben-Shalom
Joshua T. Berryman
Scott R. Brozell
David S. Cerutti
Thomas E. Cheatham III
G. Andrés Cisneros
Vinícius Wilian D. Cruzeiro
Tom A. Darden
Robert E. Duke
George Giambasu
Michael K. Gilson
Holger Gohlke
Andreas W. Goetz
Robert Harris
Saeed Izadi
Sergei A. Izmailov
Koushik Kasavajhala
Mehmet C. Kaymak
Edward King
Andriy Kovalenko
Tom Kurtzman
Taisung Lee
Scott LeGrand
Pengfei Li
Charles Lin
Jian Liu
Tyler Luchko
Ray Luo
Matias Machado
Viet Man
Madushanka Manathunga
Kenneth M. Merz
Yinglong Miao
Oleg Mikhailovskii
Gérald Monard
Hai Nguyen
Kurt A. O’Hearn
Alexey Onufriev
Feng Pan
Sergio Pantano
Ruxi Qi
Ali Rahnamoun
Daniel R. Roe
Adrian Roitberg
Celeste Sagui
Stephan Schott-Verdugo
Akhil Shajan
Jana Shen
Carlos L. Simmerling
Nikolai R. Skrynnikov
Jamie Smith
Jason Swails
Ross C. Walker
Jinan Wang
Junmei Wang
Haixin Wei
Romain M. Wolf
Xiongwu Wu
Yeyue Xiong
Yi Xue
Darrin M. York
Shiji Zhao
Peter A. Kollman
Amber is the collective name for a suite of programs that allow users to carry out molecular dynamics simulations, particularly on biomolecules. None of the individual programs carries this name, but the various parts work reasonably well together, and provide a powerful framework for many common calculations. The term Amber is also used to refer to the empirical force fields that are implemented here. It should be recognized, however, that the code and force field are separate: several other computer packages have implemented the Amber force fields, and other force fields can be implemented with the Amber programs. Further, the force fields are in the public domain, whereas the codes are distributed under a license agreement.The Amber software suite is divided into two parts: AmberTools22, a collection of freely available programs mostly under the GPL license, and Amber22, which is centered around the pmemd simulation program, and which continues to be licensed as before, under a more restrictive license. Amber22 represents a significant change from the most recent previous version, Amber20. (We have moved to numbering Amber releases by the last two digits of the calendar year, so there are no odd-numbered versions.) Please see https://ambermd.org for an overview of the most important changes.AmberTools is a set of programs for biomolecular simulation and analysis. They are designed to work well with each other, and with the “regular” Amber suite of programs. You can perform many simulation tasks with AmberTools, and you can do more extensive simulations with the combination of AmberTools and Amber itself. Most components of AmberTools are released under the GNU General Public License (GPL). A few components are in the public domain or have other open-source licenses. See the README file for more information.