Suvarna Garge (Editor)

NAMD

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Development status
  
Active

Written in
  
C++

Developer(s)
  
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign: Theoretical and Computational Biophysics Group (TCB), Parallel Programming Laboratory (PPL)

Initial release
  
1995; 22 years ago (1995)

Stable release
  
2.11 / December 22, 2015; 14 months ago (2015-12-22)

Operating system
  
Cross-platform: Windows, Linux, macOS, Unix

Nanoscale Molecular Dynamics (NAMD, formerly Not Another Molecular Dynamics Program) is computer software for molecular dynamics simulation, written using the Charm++ parallel programming model. It is noted for its parallel efficiency and is often used to simulate large systems (millions of atoms). It has been developed by the joint collaboration of the Theoretical and Computational Biophysics Group (TCB), and the Parallel Programming Laboratory (PPL), at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

It was introduced in 1995 by Nelson et al. as a parallel molecular dynamics code enabling interactive simulation by linking to the visualization code VMD. NAMD has since matured, adding many features and scaling beyond 500,000 processor cores.

NAMD is available as precompiled binaries and as source code, as freeware for non-commercial use by individuals, academic institutions, and corporations for in-house business uses.

References

NAMD Wikipedia