qpms/README.md

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QPMS README
===========
QPMS is a toolkit for frequency-domain simulations of photonic systems
consisting of compact objects (particles) inside a homogeneous medium. Scattering
properties of the individual particles are described by their T-matrices
(which can be obtained e.g. with the `scuff-tmatrix` tool from
the [SCUFF-EM] suite).
QPMS handles the multiple scattering of electromagnetic radiation between
the particles. The system can consist either of a finite number of particles
or an infinite number of periodically arranged lattices (with finite number
of particles in a single unit cell).
Features
========
Finite systems
--------------
* Computing multipole excitations *and fields (TODO)* scattered from nanoparticle
clusters illuminated by plane, spherical or *cylindrical (TODO)* waves.
* Finding eigenmodes.
* *Calculating cross sections (TODO).*
* Reducing numerical complexity of the computations by exploiting
symmetries of the cluster (decomposition to irreducible representations).
Infinite systems (lattices)
---------------------------
* 2D-periodic systems supported. (TODO 1D and 3D.)
* *Calculation of transmission and reflection properties (TODO).*
* Finding eigenmodes and calculating dispersion relations.
* *Calculation of far-field radiation patterns of an excited array (TODO).*
* Reducing numerical complexity of the computations by exploiting
symmetries of the lattice (decomposition to irreducible representations).
Installation
============
The package depends on several python modules and GSL (>= 2.0).
The python module dependencies should be installed automatically when running
the installation script. If you have a recent enough OS,
you can get GSL easily from the repositories; on Debian and derivatives,
just run `apt-get install libgsl-dev` under root. Alternatively,
you can [get the source and compile it yourself][GSL].
You also need a fresh enough version of [cmake][].
After GSL is installed, you can install qpms to your local python library using::
```
cmake .
make amos
python3 setup.py install --user
```
If GSL is not installed the standard library path on your system, you might
need to pass it to the installation script using the
`LIBRARY_PATH` and `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` environment
variables.
Special care has often be taken when installing QPMS in cluster environments.
Specific installation instructions for Aalto University's Triton cluster
can be found in a [separate document][TRITON-README].
Documentation
=============
Documentation of QPMS is a work in progress. Most of the newer code
is documented using doxygen comments. To build the documentation, just run
`doxygen`
in the root directory; the documentation will then be found in
`docs/html/index.html`.
Of course, the prerequisite of this is having doxygen installed.
If you don't, you will probably find it easily in your OS's
repositories. On Debian and derivatives, simply run `apt-get install doxygen`
under root.
Tutorials
---------
* [Infinite system (lattice) tutorial][tutorial-infinite]
* [Finite system tutorial][tutorial-finite]
[SCUFF-EM]: https://homerreid.github.io/scuff-em-documentation/
[GSL]: https://www.gnu.org/software/gsl/
[cmake]: https://cmake.org
[TRITON-README]: README.Triton.md
[tutorial-finite]: finite_systems.md
[tutorial-infinite]: lattices.md