Force Field Explorer is a graphical user
interface to the
TINKER suite of molecular modeling tools. The goal is to create a robust
environment for computational chemistry and molecular engineering applications. Current features include:
Setup and real-time visualization of modeling routines, including
local/global optimizations,
sampling methods, etc.
Basic 3D molecular visualization (wireframe, spacefilling, ball & stick,
etc) with special features for force field specific parameters such as Lennard-Jones radii
and partial charge magnitudes.
A comprehensive editor for TINKER keyword files, which contain parameters
that control modeling algorithms.
TINKER trajectory playback.
Current Release
Current Major Version: Force Field Explorer 4.2
Major Release Date: June 2004
Last Minor Revision: July 30, 2004
This is the third release of Force Field Explorer, which is being labeled
v. 4.2 and dated June 2004 to mirror the TINKER version it is compatible with.
Force Field Explorer dependencies, listed below, are now included in self-extracting installers for
Linux, Mac OSX and Microsoft Windows.
Self-Extracting Installers for Linux, Mac OS X (requires Panther 10.3) and
Microsoft Windows. These distributions include TINKER binaries, source code,
documentation and example/test files. The JRE and Java3D libraries are included
with the Linux and Windows installers. Mac OS X Panther 10.3 already includes a
JRE, however Java3D must be obtained from the OS X website (details on the
Download page).
An intuitive, consistent selection mechanism.
Improved keyword and modeling panels.
Support for TINKER internal coordinate, restart and induced dipole file
formats, plus loading of Protein Databank files directly from the PDB or from
disk. Conversion of PDB files to TINKER format (with automatic atom typing for
many biomolecules) is also supported.
Future Plans
The most important Force Field Explorer
development goal is to add
molecular editing features. We hope to soon target Java 5.0, codenamed "Tiger"
(Force Field Explorer already runs on beta releases of Java 5.0), and Java3D
1.4. Java3D has just been made open source by Sun, which has the potential to spur
API improvements. Other goals include a few more visualization methods and
support for other file types.