News

  • SNO annual meeting 2024

    SNO annual meeting 2024

    Find below the PDF files of selected presentations. The RAMSES SNO is pleased to announce its second RAMSES SNO days. The “RAMSES SNO” is a CNRS initiative to support RAMSES’ use and development within our astrophysics community. Jérémy Blaizot (Lyon) is leading this effort, along with Yohan Dubois (Paris), Matthias Gonzalez (Saclay), Pierre Ocvirk (Strasbourg), Amandine Le Brun…

  • RAMSES moves to GitHub

    RAMSES moves to GitHub

    The RAMSES code and its full history (pull requests, commits, etc.) have been migrated from the original bitbucket repository to Github at the following address: https://github.com/ramses-organisation/ramses. We have also revised the naming convention of branches: the default branch is now the branch stable (which new users should use), and the development branch is the branch…

  • A webinar on git fundamentals

    A webinar on git fundamentals

    On 04/07/2024, the first webinar of the RAMSES SNO was given by Noé Brucy. It was a tutorial teaching the basics of git usage: learn how to clone a repository, review contributions, make new contributions, and deal with conflicts. It was split into the following sections: Tutorial material can be found at https://github.com/nbrucy/git_tuto

  • RAMSES school for new users

    RAMSES school for new users

    The RAMSES SNO is pleased to announce its first RAMSES school. This school will take place in Lyon on 4-5 Nov. 2024 and is designed to provide practical training for new users of the RAMSES code who wish to learn how to design and run simulations for their science projects. The school will provide a…

  • A Census of the RAMSES Community

    A Census of the RAMSES Community

    The French astrophysics community is putting in place a service to help the international community to use and develop RAMSES in order to produce state-of-the-art simulations of astrophysical objects. This service initially relies on a commitment of 6 institutes in France (in Lyon, Paris, Saclay, Meudon, Strasbourg, and Nice) plus the benevolence of Princeton University,…

  • A new website is born!

    A new website is born!

    We are very pleased to launch the new Ramses SNO website. The aim is to gather all relevant resources around the Ramses code. Everything is very much work in progress right now, but expect quick progress here! The website is written by the Website Workgroup of the SNO. Please contact Jérémy Blaizot if you want…