Citing¶
If you are using Capytaine, please cite both following references:
Ancellin and Dias (2019), Capytaine: a Python-based linear potential flow solver, Journal of Open Source Software, 4(36), 1341, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.01341
Babarit and Delhommeau (2015), Theoretical and numerical aspects of the open source BEM solver NEMOH, Proceedings of the 11th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC2015),
or in bibtex form:
@article{ancellin_capytaine_2019,
author = {Matthieu Ancellin and Fr{\'{e}}d{\'{e}}ric Dias},
title = {Capytaine: a {Python-based} linear potential flow solver},
journal = {Journal of Open Source Software},
year = 2019,
month = {apr},
volume = {4},
number = {36},
pages = {1341},
doi = {10.21105/joss.01341},
url = {https://doi.org/10.21105%2Fjoss.01341},
}
@inproceedings{babarit_theoretical_2015,
author = {Babarit, Aur{\'e}lien and Delhommeau, G{\'e}rard},
title = {Theoretical and numerical aspects of the open source {BEM} solver {NEMOH}},
year = {2015},
booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 11th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC2015)}},
address = {Nantes, France}
}
Forward speed¶
If you are using the forward speed feature of Capytaine, please cite the following paper:
Donatini et al., Implementation of forward speed effects on an open source seakeeping solver. In 6th MASHCON: International Conference on Ship Manoeuvring in Shallow and Confined Water, 2022
@inproceedings{donatini2022implementation,
title={Implementation of forward speed effects on an open source seakeeping solver},
author={Donatini, Luca and Herdayanditya, Ivandito and Verao Fernandez, Gael and Pribadi, Ajie Brama Krishna and Lataire, Evert and Delefortrie, Guillaume},
booktitle={6th MASHCON: International Conference on Ship Manoeuvring in Shallow and Confined Water},
pages={20--33},
year={2022},
organization={Knowledge Centre for Manoeuvring in Shallow and Confined Water}
}
Source code¶
To cite the source code itself, you can use the DOI 10.5281/zenodo.1426306
.
It represents all versions of Capytaine and always points to the most recent version.
If you want to cite a specific version, you can find its own DOI on Zenodo.