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Drishti (from Sanskrit दृष्टि dr̥ṣţi, meaning "vision" or "insight") is a multi-platform, open-source volume-exploration and presentation tool. [1] Written for visualizing tomography data, electron-microscopy data and the like, it aims to ease understanding of data sets and to assist with conveying that understanding to the research community or to lay persons.
Computer-assisted organic synthesis software is a type of application software used in organic chemistry in tandem with computational chemistry to help facilitate the tasks of designing, predicting, and producing chemical reactions. CAOS aims to identify a series of chemical reactions which, from a starting compound, can produce a desired molecule.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide A Bachelor of Applied Science (BAS or BASc) is an undergraduate ...
A Bachelor of Science (BS, BSc, B.S., B.Sc., SB, or ScB; from the Latin scientiae baccalaureus) [1] is a bachelor's degree that is awarded for programs that generally last three to five years. [ 2 ] The first university to admit a student to the degree of Bachelor of Science was the University of London in 1860. [ 3 ]
Dirac (named after Paul Dirac; own notation DIRAC) is a relativistic ab initio quantum chemistry program. The full name is Program for Atomic and Molecular Direct Iterative Relativistic All-electron Calculations, in short PAM DIRAC.
Molecule builder-editor for Windows, Linux, Unix, and macOS. All source code is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2. Supported languages include: Chinese , English , French , German , Italian , Russian , Spanish , and Polish .
Gaussian / ˈ ɡ aʊ s i ə n / is a general purpose computational chemistry software package initially released in 1970 by John Pople [1] [2] and his research group at Carnegie Mellon University as Gaussian 70. [3]
ChemDraw is a molecule editor first developed in 1985 by Selena "Sally" Evans, her husband David A. Evans, and Stewart Rubenstein [1] [2] (later by the cheminformatics company CambridgeSoft).