Difference between revisions of "Simulation Methods in Physics II SS 2021"
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* For the tutorials, you will get a [[ICP Unix Accounts for Students|personal account for the ICP machines]]. | * For the tutorials, you will get a [[ICP Unix Accounts for Students|personal account for the ICP machines]]. | ||
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* For the reports, we have a nice {{Download|latex-template.tex|LaTeX template|txt}}. | * For the reports, we have a nice {{Download|latex-template.tex|LaTeX template|txt}}. | ||
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Latest revision as of 11:16, 26 April 2021
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Please register for this course on CAMPUS, so that every student can get access to ILIAS. The course will be administered through ILIAS. |
Overview
- Type
- Lecture (2 SWS) and Tutorials "Simulationsmethoden in der Praxis" (2 SWS)
- Lecturers
- Prof. Dr. Christian Holm
- aplProf Dr. Maria Fyta
- Tutors
- Dr. Azade Yazdanyar, Samuel Tovey
- Course language
- English
- Location and Time
- Lecture: Lectures will be uploaded every week to ILIAS as videos
- Tutorials: TBA ; Until further notice, tutorials will be held online. Detailed information is available in ILIAS
The tutorials have their own title "Simulationsmethoden in der Praxis", as they can be attended independently of the lecture and are in fact part part of the Physics MSc module "Fortgeschrittene Simulationsmethoden" and not of the module containing the lecture "Simulation Methods in Physics II".
Tutorials consist of practical exercises at the computer, like small programming tasks, simulations, visualization and data analysis. The tutorials build on each other, therefore continuous attendance is expected.
Scope
The course intends to give an overview about modern simulation methods used in physics today. The stress of the lecture will be to introduce different approaches to simulate a problem, hence we will not go too to deep into specific details but rather try to cover a broad range of methods. For an idea about the content look at the lecture schedule.
Prerequisites
We expect the participants to have basic knowledge in classical and statistical mechanics, thermodynamics, electrodynamics, and partial differential equations, as well as knowledge of a programming language. The knowledge of the previous course Simulation Methods I is expected.
Certificate Requirements
- 1. Obtaining 50% of the possible marks in the hand-in exercises.
The final grade will be determined from the final oral examination.
Oral Examination
Please email to Christian Holm or Maria Fyta in order to arrange a date for the oral examination.
Recommended literature
-
Daan Frenkel, Berend Smit.
Understanding Molecular Simulation: From Algorithms to Applications.
Part of Computational Science, volume 1. Edition 2.
Academic Press, San Diego, 2002. ISBN: 978-0-12-267351-1.
[DOI] -
Mike P. Allen, Dominik J. Tildesley.
Computer Simulation of Liquids.
Part of Oxford Science Publications. Edition 1.
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1987.
-
D. C. Rapaport.
The Art of Molecular Dynamics Simulation.
Edition 2.
Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN: 9780511816581.
[DOI] -
D. P. Landau, K. Binder.
A guide to Monte Carlo Simulations in Statistical Physics.
Edition second edition.
Cambridge, 2005.
-
Michael Rubinstein, Ralph H. Colby.
Polymer Physics.
Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 2003.
-
M. E. J. Newman, G. T. Barkema.
Monte Carlo Methods in Statistical Physics.
Edition 2002 edition.
Oxford University Press, 1999.
-
Sauro Succi.
The lattice Boltzmann equation for fluid dynamics and beyond.
Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 2001. ISBN: 9780198503989.
[PDF] (13 MB) -
M. E. Tuckermann.
Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Molecular Simulation.
Oxfor University Press Oxford Graduate Texts, Oxford, 2010.
-
F. Martin, H. Zipse.
Charge Distribution in the Water Molecule - A Comparison of Methods.
Journal of Computational Chemistry 26(1):97–105, 2004.
-
E. Kaxiras.
Atomic and electronic structure of solids.
apud Cambridge, Cambridge, 2003.
-
Andrew Leach.
Molecular Modelling: Principles and Applications.
apud Pearson Education Ltd., 2001. ISBN: 978-0582382107.
Useful online resources
- Roethlisberger, Tavernelli, EPFL, Lausanne, 2015: [1]
- E-Book: Kieron Burke et al.,University of California, 2007: E-Book: The ABC of DFT.
- Linux cheat sheet
here (53 KB)
.
- A good and freely available book about using Linux: Introduction to Linux by M. Garrels
- Density-functional-theory tight-binding (DFTB): Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A, 372(2011), 20120483. [2], Computational Materials Science 47 (2009) 237–253 [3]
- "Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics: Theory and Implementation" in Modern Methods and Algorithms, NIC Series Vol 1. (2000) [4]
- University Intranet: Quantentheorie der Molekuele (DE), Springer Spektrum 2015, [5]
- Be careful when using Wikipedia as a resource. It may contain a lot of useful information, but also a lot of nonsense, because anyone can write it.
Lecture
The lecture notes will be uploaded in due time after each lecture on the ILIAS course.
Date | Subject | Resources |
---|---|---|
22.04.2021 | Quantum-mechanical methods - Hartree/Hartree-Fock | |
29.04.2021 | post Hartree-Fock methods, DFT (part 1) | |
06.05.2021 | DFT (part 2), TDDFT | |
13.05.2021 | Holiday (Christi Himmelfahrt) | --- |
20.05.2021 | ab initio MD, QM/MM | |
27.05.2021 | Holiday (Pfingsten) | --- |
03.06.2021 | Holiday (Fronleichnam) | --- |
10.06.2021 | classical water models, classical (pair)interactions/force-fields | |
17.06.2021 | Simulations of macromolecules and soft matter, polymer models | |
24.06.2021 | charged polymers, Poisson-Boltzmann | |
01.07.2021 | Hydrodynamic methods I (Brownian and Langevin Dynamics) | |
08.06.2021 | Hydrodynamic methods II (DPD, Lattice-Boltzmann) | |
15.07.2021 | Free energy methods | |
22.07.2021 | State-of-the art and novel approaches |
Tutorials
Location and Time
- The time and place of the tutorials will be announced.
General Remarks
- For the tutorials, you will get a personal account for the ICP machines.
- For the reports, we have a nice
LaTeX template (7 KB)
.
Hand-in-exercises
- The worksheets are to be solved in groups of two or three people. We will not accept hand-in-exercises that only have a single name on it.
- A written report (between 5 and 10 pages) has to be handed in for each worksheet. We recommend using LaTeX to prepare the report.
- You have two weeks to prepare the report for each worksheet.
- The report has to be sent to your tutor via email (Azade Yazdanyar or Samuel Tovey).
- Each task within the tutorial is assigned a given number of points. Each student should have 50 % of the points from each tutorial as a prerequisite for the oral examination.
What happens in a tutorial
- The tutorials take place every week.
- You will receive the new worksheet on the days before the tutorial.
- In the first tutorial after you received a worksheet, the solutions of the previous worksheet will be presented (see below) and the new worksheet will be discussed.
- In the second tutorial after you received the worksheet, there is time to work on the exercises and to ask questions for the tutor.
- You will have to hand in the reports on Monday after the second tutorial.
- In the third tutorial after you received the worksheet, the solutions will be discussed:
- The tutor will ask a team to present their solution.
- The tutor will choose one of the members of the team to present each task.
- This means that each team member should be able to present any task.
- At the end of the term, everybody should have presented at least once.