The results are freely available to the nuclear physicists» community so that other groups can perform their own
nuclear structure calculations, even if they have only limited computational resources.
In a new study published in EPJ A, Susanna Liebig from Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany, and colleagues propose a new approach to
nuclear structure calculations.
Not exact matches
Teaming up with researchers from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, and Israel's Negev
Nuclear Research Center, he gradually expanded the 2003 algorithm and library into AFLOW, a system that can perform
calculations on known crystal
structures and predict new ones automatically.