Provided by: gromacs-data_4.6.5-1build1_all bug

NAME

       g_wham - weighted histogram analysis after umbrella sampling

       VERSION 4.6.5

SYNOPSIS

       g_wham  -ix  pullx-files.dat -if pullf-files.dat -it tpr-files.dat -ip pdo-files.dat -o profile.xvg -hist
       histo.xvg -oiact iact.xvg -iiact iact-in.dat -bsres bsResult.xvg  -bsprof  bsProfs.xvg  -tab  umb-pot.dat
       -[no]h  -[no]version  -nice  int  -xvg  enum -min real -max real -[no]auto -bins int -temp real -tol real
       -[no]v -b real -e real -dt real -[no]histonly -[no]boundsonly -[no]log -unit enum -zprof0 real  -[no]cycl
       -[no]sym  -[no]ac -acsig real -ac-trestart real -nBootstrap int -bs-method enum -bs-tau real -bs-seed int
       -histbs-block int -[no]vbs

DESCRIPTION

       This is an analysis program that implements the Weighted Histogram Analysis Method (WHAM). It is intended
       to analyze output files generated by umbrella sampling simulations to compute a potential of  mean  force
       (PMF).

       At present, three input modes are supported.

         *  With option  -it, the user provides a file which contains the  file names of the umbrella simulation
       run-input files ( .tpr files),  AND, with option  -ix, a file which contains file names  of    the  pullx
       mdrun  output  files.  The   .tpr  and  pullx files must  be in corresponding order, i.e. the first  .tpr
       created the  first pullx, etc.

        * Same as the previous input mode, except that the the user  provides the pull force output file names (
       pullf.xvg) with option  -if.   From the pull force the position in the umbrella potential is    computed.
       This does not work with tabulated umbrella potentials.
        *  With  option   -ip,  the  user  provides  file names of (gzipped)  .pdo files, i.e.   the GROMACS 3.3
       umbrella output files. If you have some unusual reaction coordinate you may also generate your own   .pdo
       files  and  feed them with the  -ip option into to  g_wham. The  .pdo file header  must be similar to the
       following:

         UMBRELLA      3.0

        Component selection: 0 0 1

        nSkip 1

        Ref. Group 'TestAtom'

        Nr. of pull groups 2

        Group 1 'GR1'  Umb. Pos. 5.0 Umb. Cons. 1000.0

        Group 2 'GR2'  Umb. Pos. 2.0 Umb. Cons. 500.0

       The number of pull groups, umbrella positions,  force  constants,  and  names  may  (of  course)  differ.
       Following  the header, a time column and a data column for each pull group follows (i.e. the displacement
       with respect to the umbrella center). Up to four pull groups are possible per  .pdo file at present.

       By default, the output files are

          -o      PMF output file

          -hist   Histograms output file

       Always check whether the histograms sufficiently overlap.

       The umbrella potential is assumed to be harmonic and the force constants are read from the  .tpr or  .pdo
       files. If a non-harmonic umbrella force was applied a tabulated potential can be provided with  -tab.

       WHAM OPTIONS ------------

          -bins   Number of bins used in analysis

          -temp   Temperature in the simulations

          -tol    Stop iteration if profile (probability) changed less than tolerance

          -auto   Automatic determination of boundaries

          -min,-max   Boundaries of the profile

       The data points that are used to compute the profile can be restricted with options  -b,  -e,  and   -dt.
       Adjust  -b to ensure sufficient equilibration in each umbrella window.

       With  -log (default) the profile is written in energy units, otherwise (with  -nolog) as probability. The
       unit  can  be  specified  with   -unit.  With energy output, the energy in the first bin is defined to be
       zero.  If you want the free energy at a  different  position  to  be  zero,  set   -zprof0  (useful  with
       bootstrapping, see below).

       For  cyclic  or periodic reaction coordinates (dihedral angle, channel PMF without osmotic gradient), the
       option  -cycl is useful.  g_wham will make use of the periodicity of the system and generate  a  periodic
       PMF. The first and the last bin of the reaction coordinate will assumed be be neighbors.

       Option  -sym symmetrizes the profile around z=0 before output, which may be useful for, e.g. membranes.

       AUTOCORRELATIONS ----------------

       With   -ac,  g_wham estimates the integrated autocorrelation time (IACT) tau for each umbrella window and
       weights the respective window with 1/[1+2*tau/dt]. The  IACTs  are  written  to  the  file  defined  with
       -oiact. In verbose mode, all autocorrelation functions (ACFs) are written to  hist_autocorr.xvg.  Because
       the IACTs can be severely underestimated in case of limited sampling, option  -acsig allows one to smooth
       the  IACTs  along  the  reaction  coordinate  with a Gaussian (sigma provided with  -acsig, see output in
       iact.xvg). Note that the IACTs are estimated by simple integration of the ACFs while the ACFs are  larger
       0.05.   If you prefer to compute the IACTs by a more sophisticated (but possibly less robust) method such
       as fitting to a double exponential, you can compute the IACTs with  g_analyze and provide them to  g_wham
       with the file  iact-in.dat (option  -iiact), which should contain one line  per  input  file  (  .pdo  or
       pullx/f file) and one column per pull group in the respective file.

       ERROR ANALYSIS --------------

       Statistical  errors may be estimated with bootstrap analysis. Use it with care, otherwise the statistical
       error may be substantially underestimated.  More background and examples for the bootstrap technique  can
       be found in Hub, de Groot and Van der Spoel, JCTC (2010) 6: 3713-3720.

        -nBootstrap defines the number of bootstraps (use, e.g., 100).  Four bootstrapping methods are supported
       and selected with  -bs-method.

         (1)  b-hist   Default: complete histograms are considered as independent data points, and the bootstrap
       is carried out by assigning random weights to the histograms ("Bayesian bootstrap"). Note that each point
       along  the  reaction  coordinate must be covered by multiple independent histograms (e.g. 10 histograms),
       otherwise the statistical error is underestimated.

         (2)  hist    Complete histograms are considered as independent data  points.   For  each  bootstrap,  N
       histograms  are  randomly  chosen  from  the N given histograms (allowing duplication, i.e. sampling with
       replacement).  To avoid  gaps  without  data  along  the  reaction  coordinate  blocks  of  histograms  (
       -histbs-block)  may  be  defined.  In  that  case,  the given histograms are divided into blocks and only
       histograms within each block are mixed. Note that the histograms within each block must be representative
       for all possible histograms, otherwise the statistical error is underestimated.

         (3)  traj  The given histograms are used to generate new random trajectories, such that  the  generated
       data   points   are   distributed  according  the  given  histograms  and  properly  autocorrelated.  The
       autocorrelation time (ACT) for each window must be known, so use  -ac or provide the ACT with  -iiact. If
       the ACT of all windows are identical (and known), you can also provide them  with   -bs-tau.   Note  that
       this  method  may  severely  underestimate  the  error in case of limited sampling, that is if individual
       histograms do not represent the complete phase space at the respective positions.

         (4)  traj-gauss  The same as method  traj, but the trajectories are not bootstrapped from the  umbrella
       histograms  but  from Gaussians with the average and width of the umbrella histograms. That method yields
       similar error estimates like method  traj.

       Bootstrapping output:

          -bsres   Average profile and standard deviations

          -bsprof  All bootstrapping profiles

       With  -vbs (verbose bootstrapping), the histograms of each bootstrap are  written,  and,  with  bootstrap
       method  traj, the cumulative distribution functions of the histograms.

FILES

       -ix pullx-files.dat Input, Opt.
        Generic data file

       -if pullf-files.dat Input, Opt.
        Generic data file

       -it tpr-files.dat Input, Opt.
        Generic data file

       -ip pdo-files.dat Input, Opt.
        Generic data file

       -o profile.xvg Output
        xvgr/xmgr file

       -hist histo.xvg Output
        xvgr/xmgr file

       -oiact iact.xvg Output, Opt.
        xvgr/xmgr file

       -iiact iact-in.dat Input, Opt.
        Generic data file

       -bsres bsResult.xvg Output, Opt.
        xvgr/xmgr file

       -bsprof bsProfs.xvg Output, Opt.
        xvgr/xmgr file

       -tab umb-pot.dat Input, Opt.
        Generic data file

OTHER OPTIONS

       -[no]hno
        Print help info and quit

       -[no]versionno
        Print version info and quit

       -nice int 19
        Set the nicelevel

       -xvg enum xmgrace
        xvg plot formatting:  xmgrace,  xmgr or  none

       -min real 0
        Minimum coordinate in profile

       -max real 0
        Maximum coordinate in profile

       -[no]autoyes
        Determine min and max automatically

       -bins int 200
        Number of bins in profile

       -temp real 298
        Temperature

       -tol real 1e-06
        Tolerance

       -[no]vno
        Verbose mode

       -b real 50
        First time to analyse (ps)

       -e real 1e+20
        Last time to analyse (ps)

       -dt real 0
        Analyse only every dt ps

       -[no]histonlyno
        Write histograms and exit

       -[no]boundsonlyno
        Determine min and max and exit (with  -auto)

       -[no]logyes
        Calculate the log of the profile before printing

       -unit enum kJ
        Energy unit in case of log output:  kJ,  kCal or  kT

       -zprof0 real 0
        Define profile to 0.0 at this position (with  -log)

       -[no]cyclno
        Create cyclic/periodic profile. Assumes min and max are the same point.

       -[no]symno
        Symmetrize profile around z=0

       -[no]acno
        Calculate integrated autocorrelation times and use in wham

       -acsig real 0
        Smooth autocorrelation times along reaction coordinate with Gaussian of this sigma

       -ac-trestart real 1
        When computing autocorrelation functions, restart computing every .. (ps)

       -nBootstrap int 0
        nr of bootstraps to estimate statistical uncertainty (e.g., 200)

       -bs-method enum b-hist
        Bootstrap method:  b-hist,  hist,  traj or  traj-gauss

       -bs-tau real 0
        Autocorrelation time (ACT) assumed for all histograms. Use option  -ac if ACT is unknown.

       -bs-seed int -1
        Seed for bootstrapping. (-1 = use time)

       -histbs-block int 8
        When mixing histograms only mix within blocks of  -histbs-block.

       -[no]vbsno
        Verbose bootstrapping. Print the CDFs and a histogram file for each bootstrap.

SEE ALSO

       gromacs(7)

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

                                                 Mon 2 Dec 2013                                        g_wham(1)