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GMX-DENSITY(1)			    GROMACS			GMX-DENSITY(1)

NAME
       gmx-density - Calculate the density of the system

SYNOPSIS
	  gmx density [-f [<.xtc/.trr/...>]] [-n [<.ndx>]] [-s [<.tpr>]]
		      [-ei [<.dat>]] [-o [<.xvg>]] [-b <time>] [-e <time>]
		      [-dt <time>] [-[no]w] [-xvg <enum>] [-d <string>]
		      [-sl <int>] [-dens <enum>] [-ng <int>] [-[no]center]
		      [-[no]symm]

DESCRIPTION
       gmx  density  computes partial densities	across the box,	using an index
       file.

       For the total density of	NPT simulations, use gmx energy	instead.

       Option -center performs the histogram binning relative to the center of
       an arbitrary group, in absolute box coordinates.	If you are calculating
       profiles	along the Z axis box dimension bZ, output would	be from	 -bZ/2
       to  bZ/2	 if you	center based on	the entire system.  Note that this be-
       haviour has changed in GROMACS 5.0; earlier versions merely performed a
       static binning in (0,bZ)	and shifted the	output.	 Now  we  compute  the
       center for each frame and bin in	(-bZ/2,bZ/2).

       Option  -symm symmetrizes the output around the center. This will auto-
       matically turn on -center too.  The binning is now always performed  in
       relative	 coordinates to	account	for changing box dimensions with pres-
       sure coupling, with the output scaled  to  the  average	box  dimension
       along the output	axis.

       Densities are in	kg/m^3,	and number densities or	electron densities can
       also  be	calculated. For	electron densities, a file describing the num-
       ber of electrons	for each type of atom should be	 provided  using  -ei.
       It should look like:

	  2
	  atomname = nrelectrons
	  atomname = nrelectrons

       The  first  line	 contains  the	number of lines	to read	from the file.
       There should be one line	for each unique	atom name in your system.  The
       number of electrons for each atom is modified  by  its  atomic  partial
       charge.

       IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS	FOR BILAYERS

       One  of	the most common	usage scenarios	is to calculate	the density of
       various groups across a lipid bilayer, typically	with the z axis	 being
       the  normal  direction. For short simulations, small systems, and fixed
       box sizes this will work	fine, but for the more general case lipid  bi-
       layers  can be complicated.  The	first problem that while both proteins
       and lipids have low volume compressibility, lipids have quite high area
       compressiblity.	This  means  the  shape	 of  the  box  (thickness  and
       area/lipid)  will fluctuate substantially even for a fully relaxed sys-
       tem. Since GROMACS places the box between the origin and	positive coor-
       dinates,	this in	turn means that	a bilayer centered  in	the  box  will
       move  a	bit up/down due	to these fluctuations, and smear out your pro-
       file. The easiest way to	fix this (if you want pressure coupling) is to
       use the -center option that calculates the density profile with respect
       to the center of	the box. Note that you can still center	on the bilayer
       part even if you	have a complex non-symmetric  system  with  a  bilayer
       and,  say,  membrane  proteins  - then our output will simply have more
       values on one side of the (center) origin reference.

       Finally,	large bilayers that are	not subject to a surface tension  will
       exhibit undulatory fluctuations,	where there are	'waves'	forming	in the
       system.	 This  is a fundamental	property of the	biological system, and
       if you are comparing against experiments	you likely want	to include the
       undulation smearing effect.

OPTIONS
       Options to specify input	files:

       -f [<.xtc/.trr/...>] (traj.xtc)
	      Trajectory: xtc trr cpt gro g96 pdb tng

       -n [<.ndx>] (index.ndx) (Optional)
	      Index file

       -s [<.tpr>] (topol.tpr)
	      Portable xdr run input file

       -ei [<.dat>] (electrons.dat) (Optional)
	      Generic data file

       Options to specify output files:

       -o [<.xvg>] (density.xvg)
	      xvgr/xmgr	file

       Other options:

       -b <time> (0)
	      Time of first frame to read from trajectory (default unit	ps)

       -e <time> (0)
	      Time of last frame to read from trajectory (default unit ps)

       -dt <time> (0)
	      Only use frame when t MOD	dt = first time	(default unit ps)

       -[no]w (no)
	      View output .xvg,	.xpm, .eps and .pdb files

       -xvg <enum> (xmgrace)
	      xvg plot formatting: xmgrace, xmgr, none

       -d <string> (Z)
	      Take the normal on the membrane in direction X, Y	or Z.

       -sl <int> (50)
	      Divide the box in	this number of slices.

       -dens <enum> (mass)
	      Density: mass, number, charge, electron

       -ng <int> (1)
	      Number of	groups of which	to compute densities.

       -[no]center (no)
	      Perform the binning relative to the  center  of  the  (changing)
	      box. Useful for bilayers.

       -[no]symm (no)
	      Symmetrize  the density along the	axis, with respect to the cen-
	      ter. Useful for bilayers.

KNOWN ISSUES
        When calculating electron densities, atomnames	are  used  instead  of
	 types.	This is	bad.

SEE ALSO
       gmx(1)

       More	information    about	GROMACS	   is	 available    at    <-
       http://www.gromacs.org/>.

COPYRIGHT
       2025, GROMACS development team

2025.0				 Feb 10, 2025			GMX-DENSITY(1)

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