DiffPy was initiated as part of the Distributed Data Analysis of Neutron Scattering Experiments (DANSE) project, funded by the National Science Foundation under grant DMR-0520547. More information on DANSE can be found at http://danse.us. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF.
This code was developed as part of the DiffPy project to create python modules for structure investigations from diffraction data. The main contributors to this package were
Chris Farrow, Jiwu Liu, Pavol Juhas, Dmitriy Bryndin
Other current and former contributors of the DiffPy project include
Simon Billinge, Chris Farrow, Emil Bozin, Wenduo Zhou, Peng Tian
The DiffPy team is part of the Billinge Group at Columbia University in New York, within the Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics.
Please see the header of each source file for a detailed list of contributors. This is an open-source project and we hope and expect that the list of contributors will expand with time. Many thanks to all current and future contributors!
For more information on the DiffPy project email [email protected]
For a list of contributors, visit https://github.com/diffpy/diffpy.pdfgui/graphs/contributors
We are truly grateful to all the people who have contributed, in all different ways, to this project: Thomas Proffen, Xiangyun Qiu, Pete Peterson and Jacques Bloch, previous Billinge-group members whose contributions to the codes are living well beyond their affiliation with the group; The hard working DANSE group at Caltech, University of Maryland, Iowa State and University of Tennessee, especially Brent Fultz for doggedly putting DANSE all together and Michael Aivazis, and the indomitable Mike McKerns for their design input and MM's gargantuan excel spreadsheets; The former members of the Billinge-group members, especially HyunJeong Kim and Ahmad Masadeh for enthusiastic testing and feature requests; Last but not least, our long suffering family members, and the whole coffee and tea industries at large, without whom none of this would have been possible.