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Daresbury Laboratory

facilityDaresbury, United Kingdom

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Daresbury Laboratory (United Kingdom). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
9.8K
Citations
761.9K
h-index
275
i10-index
11.1K
Also known as
Daresbury Laboratory

Top-cited papers from Daresbury Laboratory

<i>Phaser</i>crystallographic software
Airlie J. McCoy, Ralf W. Grosse‐Kunstleve, Paul D. Adams, Martyn Winn +2 more
2007· Journal of Applied Crystallography20.8Kdoi:10.1107/s0021889807021206

Phaser is a program for phasing macromolecular crystal structures by both molecular replacement and experimental phasing methods. The novel phasing algorithms implemented in Phaser have been developed using maximum likelihood and multivariate statistics. For molecular replacement, the new algorithms have proved to be significantly better than traditional methods in discriminating correct solutions from noise, and for single-wavelength anomalous dispersion experimental phasing, the new algorithms, which account for correlations between F(+) and F(-), give better phases (lower mean phase error with respect to the phases given by the refined structure) than those that use mean F and anomalous differences DeltaF. One of the design concepts of Phaser was that it be capable of a high degree of automation. To this end, Phaser (written in C++) can be called directly from Python, although it can also be called using traditional CCP4 keyword-style input. Phaser is a platform for future development of improved phasing methods and their release, including source code, to the crystallographic community.

Overview of the<i>CCP</i>4 suite and current developments
Martyn Winn, Charles Ballard, Kevin Cowtan, E.J. Dodson +4 more
2011· Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography12.5Kdoi:10.1107/s0907444910045749

The CCP4 (Collaborative Computational Project, Number 4) software suite is a collection of programs and associated data and software libraries which can be used for macromolecular structure determination by X-ray crystallography. The suite is designed to be flexible, allowing users a number of methods of achieving their aims. The programs are from a wide variety of sources but are connected by a common infrastructure provided by standard file formats, data objects and graphical interfaces. Structure solution by macromolecular crystallography is becoming increasingly automated and the CCP4 suite includes several automation pipelines. After giving a brief description of the evolution of CCP4 over the last 30 years, an overview of the current suite is given. While detailed descriptions are given in the accompanying articles, here it is shown how the individual programs contribute to a complete software package.

<i>REFMAC</i>5 for the refinement of macromolecular crystal structures
Garib N. Murshudov, Pavol Skubák, Andrey A. Lebedev, Navraj S. Pannu +4 more
2011· Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography8.6Kdoi:10.1107/s0907444911001314

This paper describes various components of the macromolecular crystallographic refinement program REFMAC5, which is distributed as part of the CCP4 suite. REFMAC5 utilizes different likelihood functions depending on the diffraction data employed (amplitudes or intensities), the presence of twinning and the availability of SAD/SIRAS experimental diffraction data. To ensure chemical and structural integrity of the refined model, REFMAC5 offers several classes of restraints and choices of model parameterization. Reliable models at resolutions at least as low as 4 Å can be achieved thanks to low-resolution refinement tools such as secondary-structure restraints, restraints to known homologous structures, automatic global and local NCS restraints, `jelly-body' restraints and the use of novel long-range restraints on atomic displacement parameters (ADPs) based on the Kullback-Leibler divergence. REFMAC5 additionally offers TLS parameterization and, when high-resolution data are available, fast refinement of anisotropic ADPs. Refinement in the presence of twinning is performed in a fully automated fashion. REFMAC5 is a flexible and highly optimized refinement package that is ideally suited for refinement across the entire resolution spectrum encountered in macromolecular crystallography.

X-ray circular dichroism as a probe of orbital magnetization
B. T. Thole, Paolo Carra, F. Sette, G. van der Laan
1992· Physical Review Letters2.7Kdoi:10.1103/physrevlett.68.1943

A new magneto-optical sum rule is derived for circular magnetic dichroism in the x-ray region (CMXD). The integral of the CMXD signal over a given edge allows one to determine the ground-state expectation value of the orbital angular momentum. Applications are discussed to transition-metal and rare-earth magnetic systems.

CLUSTAL V: improved software for multiple sequence alignment
Desmond G. Higgins, Alan J. Bleasby, Rainer Fuchs
1992· Computer applications in the biosciences2.4Kdoi:10.1093/bioinformatics/8.2.189

The CLUSTAL package of multiple sequence alignment programs has been completely rewritten and many new features added. The new software is a single program called CLUSTAL V, which is written in C and can be used on any machine with a standard C compiler. The main new features are the ability to store and reuse old alignments and the ability to calculate phylogenetic trees after alignment. The program is simple to use, completely menu driven and on-line help is provided.

Use of TLS parameters to model anisotropic displacements in macromolecular refinement
Martyn Winn, Michail N. Isupov, Garib N. Murshudov
2001· Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography1.7Kdoi:10.1107/s0907444900014736

An essential step in macromolecular refinement is the selection of model parameters which give as good a description of the experimental data as possible while retaining a realistic data-to-parameter ratio. This is particularly true of the choice of atomic displacement parameters, where the move from individual isotropic to individual anisotropic refinement involves a sixfold increase in the number of required displacement parameters. The number of refinement parameters can be reduced by using collective variables rather than independent atomic variables and one of the simplest examples of this is the TLS parameterization for describing the translation, libration and screw-rotation displacements of a pseudo-rigid body. This article describes the implementation of the TLS parameterization in the macromolecular refinement program REFMAC. Derivatives of the residual with respect to the TLS parameters are expanded in terms of the derivatives with respect to individual anisotropic U values, which in turn are calculated using a fast Fourier transform technique. TLS refinement is therefore fast and can be used routinely. Examples of TLS refinement are given for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and a transcription activator GerE, for both of which there is data to only 2.0 A, so that individual anisotropic refinement is not feasible. GAPDH has been refined with between one and four TLS groups in the asymmetric unit and GerE with six TLS groups. In both cases, inclusion of TLS parameters gives improved refinement statistics and in particular an improvement in R and free R values of several percent. Furthermore, GAPDH and GerE have two and six molecules in the asymmetric unit, respectively, and in each case the displacement parameters differ significantly between molecules. These differences are well accounted for by the TLS parameterization, leaving residual local displacements which are very similar between molecules and to which NCS restraints can be applied.

<i>xia2</i>: an expert system for macromolecular crystallography data reduction
Graeme Winter
2009· Journal of Applied Crystallography1.5Kdoi:10.1107/s0021889809045701

An expert system for macromolecular crystallography data reduction is presented, which builds on existing software to automate the complete data reduction process from images to merged structure factor amplitudes. This can automatically identify multi-wedge, multi-pass and multiwavelength data sets and includes explicit procedures to test for crystallographic special cases. With the push towards high-thoughput crystallography at synchrotron beamlines and automation of structure solution, the ability to reduce data with no user input fills an important gap in the pipeline.

Indication of Electron Neutrino Appearance from an Accelerator-Produced Off-Axis Muon Neutrino Beam
K. Abe, N. Abgrall, Y. Ajima, H. Aihara +4 more
2011· Physical Review Letters1.3Kdoi:10.1103/physrevlett.107.041801

The T2K experiment observes indications of ν(μ) → ν(e) appearance in data accumulated with 1.43×10(20) protons on target. Six events pass all selection criteria at the far detector. In a three-flavor neutrino oscillation scenario with |Δm(23)(2)| = 2.4×10(-3) eV(2), sin(2)2θ(23) = 1 and sin(2)2θ(13) = 0, the expected number of such events is 1.5±0.3(syst). Under this hypothesis, the probability to observe six or more candidate events is 7×10(-3), equivalent to 2.5σ significance. At 90% C.L., the data are consistent with 0.03(0.04) < sin(2)2θ(13) < 0.28(0.34) for δ(CP) = 0 and a normal (inverted) hierarchy.

A graphical user interface to the<i>CCP</i>4 program suite
Elizabeth Potterton, Peter Briggs, Maria Turkenburg, E.J. Dodson
2003· Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography1.2Kdoi:10.1107/s0907444903008126

CCP4i is a graphical user interface that makes running programs from the CCP4 suite simpler and quicker. It is particularly directed at inexperienced users and tightly linked to introductory and scientific documentation. It also provides a simple project-management system and visualization tools. The system is readily extensible and not specific to CCP4 software.

DL_POLY_3: new dimensions in molecular dynamics simulations via massive parallelism
Ilian T. Todorov, William R. Smith, Kostya Trachenko, Martin T. Dove
2006· Journal of Materials Chemistry1.1Kdoi:10.1039/b517931a

DL_POLY_3 is a general-purpose massively parallel molecular dynamics simulation package embedding a highly efficient set of methods and algorithms such as: Domain Decomposition (DD), Linked Cells (LC), Daresbury Advanced Fourier Transform (DAFT), Trotter derived Velocity Verlet (VV) integration and RATTLE. Written to support academic research, it has a wide range of applications and can run on a wide range of computers; from single processor workstations to multi-processor computers. The code development has placed particular emphasis on the efficient utilization of multi-processor power by optimised memory workload and distribution, which makes it possible to simulate systems of the order of tens of millions of particles and beyond. In this paper we discuss the new DL_POLY_3 design, and report on the performance, capability and scalability. We also discuss new features implemented to simulate highly non-equilibrium processes of radiation damage and analyse the structural damage during such processes.

The United Kingdom Chemical Database Service
D. A. Fletcher, Robert F. McMeeking, Donald Maxwell Parkin
1996· Journal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences1.1Kdoi:10.1021/ci960015+

The Chemical Database Service (CDS) is a national service, funded by the Chemistry Programme of the United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC). It provides access for UK academics to a range of chemistry databases in the areas of crystallography, synthetic organic chemistry, spectroscopy, and physical chemistry. Three post-doctoral chemists are available to assist users with problems, run training courses, and also give advice to the community on accessing other sources of chemical data and software.

Liquid exfoliation of solvent-stabilized few-layer black phosphorus for applications beyond electronics
Damien Hanlon, Claudia Backes, Evie Doherty, Clotilde S. Cucinotta +4 more
2015· Nature Communications1.1Kdoi:10.1038/ncomms9563

Few-layer black phosphorus (BP) is a new two-dimensional material which is of great interest for applications, mainly in electronics. However, its lack of environmental stability severely limits its synthesis and processing. Here we demonstrate that high-quality, few-layer BP nanosheets, with controllable size and observable photoluminescence, can be produced in large quantities by liquid phase exfoliation under ambient conditions in solvents such as N-cyclohexyl-2-pyrrolidone (CHP). Nanosheets are surprisingly stable in CHP, probably due to the solvation shell protecting the nanosheets from reacting with water or oxygen. Experiments, supported by simulations, show reactions to occur only at the nanosheet edge, with the rate and extent of the reaction dependent on the water/oxygen content. We demonstrate that liquid-exfoliated BP nanosheets are potentially useful in a range of applications from ultrafast saturable absorbers to gas sensors to fillers for composite reinforcement.

Reliability factors for LEED calculations
J. B. Pendry
1980· Journal of Physics C Solid State Physics1.1Kdoi:10.1088/0022-3719/13/5/024

A new R-factor is defined which is insensitive to intensity discrepancies between theory and experiment but retains a simple functional form. An error analysis of R introduces another new quantity, the 'double-R' reliability factor, RR, where R*RR is the variance of R. This enables quantitative statements to be made about the significance of minima in R.

Polyisoprene-Polystyrene Diblock Copolymer Phase Diagram near the Order-Disorder Transition
Ashish K. Khandpur, Stephan Foerster, Frank S. Bates, Ian W. Hamley +4 more
1995· Macromolecules1.0Kdoi:10.1021/ma00130a012

ADVERTISEMENT RETURN TO ISSUEPREVArticleNEXTPolyisoprene-Polystyrene Diblock Copolymer Phase Diagram near the Order-Disorder TransitionAshish K. Khandpur, Stephan Foerster, Frank S. Bates, Ian W. Hamley, Anthony J. Ryan, Wim Bras, Kristoffer Almdal, and Kell MortensenCite this: Macromolecules 1995, 28, 26, 8796–8806Publication Date (Print):December 1, 1995Publication History Published online1 May 2002Published inissue 1 December 1995https://doi.org/10.1021/ma00130a012RIGHTS & PERMISSIONSArticle Views9315Altmetric-Citations871LEARN ABOUT THESE METRICSArticle Views are the COUNTER-compliant sum of full text article downloads since November 2008 (both PDF and HTML) across all institutions and individuals. These metrics are regularly updated to reflect usage leading up to the last few days.Citations are the number of other articles citing this article, calculated by Crossref and updated daily. Find more information about Crossref citation counts.The Altmetric Attention Score is a quantitative measure of the attention that a research article has received online. Clicking on the donut icon will load a page at altmetric.com with additional details about the score and the social media presence for the given article. Find more information on the Altmetric Attention Score and how the score is calculated. Share Add toView InAdd Full Text with ReferenceAdd Description ExportRISCitationCitation and abstractCitation and referencesMore Options Share onFacebookTwitterWechatLinked InReddit PDF (4 MB) Get e-Alerts Get e-Alerts

Efficient anisotropic refinement of macromolecular structures using FFT
Garib N. Murshudov, Alexei A. Vagin, A.N. Lebedev, Keith S. Wilson +1 more
1999· Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography935doi:10.1107/s090744499801405x

This paper gives the equations for the use of fast Fourier transformations in individual atomic anisotropic refinement. Restraints on bonded atoms, on the sphericity of each atom and between non-crystallographic symmetry related atoms are described. These have been implemented in the program REFMAC and its performance with several examples is analysed. All the tests show that anisotropic refinement not only reduces the R value and Rfree but also improves the fit to geometric targets, indicating that this parameterization is valuable for improving models derived from experimental data. The computer time taken is comparable to that for isotropic refinements.

FCC-ee: The Lepton Collider
Asmâa Abada, M. Abbrescia, Shehu AbdusSalam, I. M. Abdyukhanov +4 more
2019· The European Physical Journal Special Topics904doi:10.1140/epjst/e2019-900045-4

In response to the 2013 Update of the European Strategy for Particle Physics, the Future Circular Collider (FCC) study was launched, as an international collaboration hosted by CERN. This study covers a highest-luminosity high-energy lepton collider (FCC-ee) and an energy-frontier hadron collider (FCC-hh), which could, successively, be installed in the same 100 km tunnel. The scientific capabilities of the integrated FCC programme would serve the worldwide community throughout the 21st century. The FCC study also investigates an LHC energy upgrade, using FCC-hh technology. This document constitutes the second volume of the FCC Conceptual Design Report, devoted to the electron-positron collider FCC-ee. After summarizing the physics discovery opportunities, it presents the accelerator design, performance reach, a staged operation scenario, the underlying technologies, civil engineering, technical infrastructure, and an implementation plan. FCC-ee can be built with today's technology. Most of the FCC-ee infrastructure could be reused for FCC-hh. Combining concepts from past and present lepton colliders and adding a few novel elements, the FCC-ee design promises outstandingly high luminosity. This will make the FCC-ee a unique precision instrument to study the heaviest known particles (Z, W and H bosons and the top quark), offering great direct and indirect sensitivity to new physics.

Hard-X-Ray Lensless Imaging of Extended Objects
J. M. Rodenburg, A C Hurst, A. G. Cullis, B. R. Dobson +4 more
2007· Physical Review Letters844doi:10.1103/physrevlett.98.034801

We demonstrate a hard-x-ray microscope that does not use a lens and is not limited to a small field of view or an object of finite size. The method does not suffer any of the physical constraints, convergence problems, or defocus ambiguities that often arise in conventional phase-retrieval diffractive imaging techniques. Calculation times are about a thousand times shorter than in current iterative algorithms. We need no a priori knowledge about the object, which can be a transmission function with both modulus and phase components. The technique has revolutionary implications for x-ray imaging of all classes of specimen.

Crystal field effects on the topological properties of the electron density in molecular crystals: The case of urea
Carlo Gatti, V. R. Saunders, C. Roetti
1994· The Journal of Chemical Physics782doi:10.1063/1.467882

The Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules, due to Bader, is applied to periodic systems. Results for molecular and crystalline urea are presented. Changes in both bond critical points and atomic properties due to changes of chemical environment are described. A rationale for the different lengths of the in-plane and out-of-plane hydrogen bonds and for the lengthening of the CO bond in bulk urea is provided in terms of the properties of the Laplacian of the oxygen atom electron density distribution. An evaluation of molecular and atomic volume changes indicates that the decrease of molecular volume upon change of phase from gas to solid originates primarily from a contraction of the atomic basins directly involved in hydrogen bonds. Other atoms show a small expansion. The considerable decrease of oxygen and hydrogen atomic volumes is related to the mutual penetration of their van der Waals envelopes following hydrogen bond formation. The results confirm that urea is more polar in the solid phase.

Constraints on the symmetry energy and neutron skins from experiments and theory
M. B. Tsang, J. R. Stone, F. Camera, Paweł Danielewicz +4 more
2012· Physical Review C733doi:10.1103/physrevc.86.015803

The symmetry energy contribution to the nuclear equation of state impacts various phenomena in nuclear astrophysics, nuclear structure, and nuclear reactions. Its determination is a key objective of contemporary nuclear physics, with consequences for the understanding of dense matter within neutron stars. We examine the results of laboratory experiments that have provided initial constraints on the nuclear symmetry energy and on its density dependence at and somewhat below normal nuclear matter density. Even though some of these constraints have been derived from properties of nuclei while others have been derived from the nuclear response to electroweak and hadronic probes, within experimental uncertainties-they are consistent with each other. We also examine the most frequently used theoretical models that predict the symmetry energy and its slope parameter. By comparing existing constraints on the symmetry pressure to theories, we demonstrate how contributions of three-body forces, which are essential ingredients in neutron matter models, can be determined.

FCC Physics Opportunities
A. Abada, M. Abbrescia, Shehu AbdusSalam, I. M. Abdyukhanov +4 more
2019· The European Physical Journal C664doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-019-6904-3

Abstract: We review the physics opportunities of the Future Circular Collider, covering its e+e-, pp, ep and heavy ion programmes. We describe the measurement capabilities of each FCC component, addressing the study of electroweak, Higgs and strong interactions, the top quark and flavour, as well as phenomena beyond the Standard Model. We highlight the synergy and complementarity of the different colliders, which will contribute to a uniquely coherent and ambitious research programme, providing an unmatchable combination of precision and sensitivity to new physics.