This is sphericart, a multi-language library for the efficient calculation of real spherical harmonics and their derivatives in Cartesian coordinates.
For instructions and examples on the usage of the library, please refer to our documentation.
If you are using sphericart for your academic work, you can cite it as
@article{sphericart,
title={Fast evaluation of spherical harmonics with sphericart},
author={Bigi, Filippo and Fraux, Guillaume and Browning, Nicholas J. and Ceriotti, Michele},
journal={J. Chem. Phys.},
year={2023},
number={159},
pages={064802},
}
This library is dual-licensed under the Apache License 2.0 and the MIT license. You can use to use it under either of the two licenses.
Pre-built (https://pypi.org/project/sphericart/).
pip install sphericart # numpy interface, CPU only
pip install sphericart[torch] # Torch (and TorchScript) interface, CPU and GPU
pip install sphericart[jax] # JAX interface, CPU and GPUNote that the pre-built packages are compiled for a generic CPU, and might be less performant than they could be on a specific processor. To generate libraries that are optimized for the target system, you can build from source:
git clone https://github.com/lab-cosmo/sphericart
pip install .
# if you also want the torch bindings (CPU and GPU)
pip install .[torch]
# torch bindings, CPU-only version
pip install --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu .[torch]If you want to enable the CUDA version of the code when builing from source,
you'll need to set the CUDA_HOME environement variable. You can build a CUDA enabled sphericart, but the calculations though numpy will only run on CPU.
A native Julia implementation of sphericart is provided, called SpheriCart.
Install the package by opening a REPL, switch to the package manager by
typing ] and then add SpheriCart.
See julia/README.md for usage.
From source
git clone https://github.com/lab-cosmo/sphericart
cd sphericart
mkdir build && cd build
cmake .. <cmake configuration options>
cmake --build . --target installThe following cmake configuration options are available:
-DSPHERICART_BUILD_TORCH=ON/OFF: build the torch bindings in addition to the main library-DSPHERICART_BUILD_TESTS=ON/OFF: build C++ unit tests-DSPHERICART_BUILD_EXAMPLES=ON/OFF: build C++ examples and benchmarks-DSPHERICART_OPENMP=ON/OFF: enable OpenMP parallelism-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<where/you/want/to/install>set the root path for installation
Tests and the local build of the documentation can be run with tox.
The default tests, which are also run on the CI, can be executed by simply running
toxin the main folder of the repository.
To run tests in a CPU-only environment you can set the environment variable
PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL before calling tox, e.g.
PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL=https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu tox -e docswill build the documentation in a CPU-only environment.
Although sphericart natively calculates real solid and spherical harmonics from Cartesian positions, it is easy to manipulate its output it to calculate complex spherical harmonics and/or to accept spherical coordinates as inputs. You can see examples here.
