Phaser Crystallographic Software

From Phaserwiki
Revision as of 13:11, 28 June 2012 by Airlie (talk | contribs) (Phaser-2.5.0)

Phaser is a program for phasing macromolecular crystal structures with maximum likelihood methods. It has been developed by Randy Read's group at the Cambridge Insitute for Medical Research (CIMR) in the University of Cambridge and is available through the Phenix and CCP4 software suites.

This wiki supersedes http://www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk/phaser/ which is now obsolete (and redirects to this page). A copy of the obsolete website can be found at http://www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk/phaser_obsolete/

Use the sidebar to navigate through the extensive documentation for Phaser.

Currently Supported Releases

Phaser-2.5.1 Under Construction

Download with Phenix Nightly Builds → Phenix Downloads
Full Documentation → Manual
Quicklinks to Keywords → Keywords

Phaser-2.5.0

Download with Phenix Official Release 1.8 (23rd June 2012)→ Phenix Downloads
Download with CCP4 6.3 Package (development release) → CCP4
Full Documentation → Manual
Quicklinks to Keywords → Keywords

Phaser-2.3.0

Download with CCP4 6.2 Package → CCP4
Full Documentation → Manual
Quicklinks to Keywords → Keywords
Bugfixes
  1. Packing criteria incorrectly set for Phaser MR in CCP4i
    A fixed interface is available from the ftp site and replaces the distributed interface in automated downloads from 3rd August 2011 onwards.CCP4-6.2.0 interface bug
  2. Released 32 bit binary occasionally aborts on 64 bit Linux
    A fixed 32 bit binary is available from the ftp site and replaces the distributed binary in automated downloads from 19th October 2011 onwards.CCP4-6.2.0 program bug.


Referencing Phaser

Citing crystallographic software in your paper is important for funding new software development. We rely on your citations to convince funding bodies that our software is being used.

If you solve a structure with Phaser, please cite

Phaser crystallographic software pdf
McCoy AJ, Grosse-Kunstleve RW, Adams PD, Winn MD, Storoni LC, Read RJ.
J. Appl. Cryst. (2007). 40, 658-674.