TopicPhysics of Life
Content Overview
7Total items
7Seminars

Latest

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Membrane mechanics meet minimal manifolds

Leroy Jia
Flatiron Institute
Jun 20, 2022

Changes in the geometry and topology of self-assembled membranes underlie diverse processes across cellular biology and engineering. Similar to lipid bilayers, monolayer colloidal membranes studied by the Sharma (IISc Bangalore) and Dogic (UCSB) Labs have in-plane fluid-like dynamics and out-of-plane bending elasticity, but their open edges and micron length scale provide a tractable system to study the equilibrium energetics and dynamic pathways of membrane assembly and reconfiguration. First, we discuss how doping colloidal membranes with short miscible rods transforms disk-shaped membranes into saddle-shaped minimal surfaces with complex edge structures. Theoretical modeling demonstrates that their formation is driven by increasing positive Gaussian modulus, which in turn is controlled by the fraction of short rods. Further coalescence of saddle-shaped surfaces leads to exotic topologically distinct structures, including shapes similar to catenoids, tri-noids, four-noids, and higher order structures. We then mathematically explore the mechanics of these catenoid-like structures subject to an external axial force and elucidate their intimate connection to two problems whose solutions date back to Euler: the shape of an area-minimizing soap film and the buckling of a slender rod under compression. A perturbation theory argument directly relates the tensions of membranes to the stability properties of minimal surfaces. We also investigate the effects of including a Gaussian curvature modulus, which, for small enough membranes, causes the axial force to diverge as the ring separation approaches its maximal value.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Flocking through complex environments

Suraj Shankar
Harvard University
Jun 7, 2021

The spontaneous collective motion of self-propelled agents is ubiquitous in the natural world, and it often occurs in complex environments, be it bacteria and cells migrating through polymeric extracellular matrix or animal herds and human crowds navigating structured terrains. Much is known about flocking dynamics in pristine backgrounds, but how do spatio-temporal heterogeneities in the environment impact such collective self-organization? I will present two model systems, a colloidal active fluid negotiating disordered obstacles and a confined dense bacterial suspension in a viscoelastic medium, as controllable platforms to explore this question and highlight general mechanisms for active self-organization in complex environments. By combining theory and experiment, I will show how flocks on disordered substrates organize into a novel dynamic vortex glass phase, akin to vortex glasses in dirty superconductors, while the presence of viscoelasticity can calm the otherwise turbulent swarming of bacteria, allowing the emergence of a large scale coherent and even oscillatory vortex when confined on the millimetre scale.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Microorganism locomotion in viscoelastic fluids

Becca Thomases
University of California Davis
May 12, 2021

Many microorganisms and cells function in complex (non-Newtonian) fluids, which are mixtures of different materials and exhibit both viscous and elastic stresses. For example, mammalian sperm swim through cervical mucus on their journey through the female reproductive tract, and they must penetrate the viscoelastic gel outside the ovum to fertilize. In micro-scale swimming the dynamics emerge from the coupled interactions between the complex rheology of the surrounding media and the passive and active body dynamics of the swimmer. We use computational models of swimmers in viscoelastic fluids to investigate and provide mechanistic explanations for emergent swimming behaviors. I will discuss how flexible filaments (such as flagella) can store energy from a viscoelastic fluid to gain stroke boosts due to fluid elasticity. I will also describe 3D simulations of model organisms such as C. Reinhardtii and mammalian sperm, where we use experimentally measured stroke data to separate naturally coupled stroke and fluid effects. We explore why strokes that are adapted to Newtonian fluid environments might not do well in viscoelastic environments.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Opposite response of cancer cells to substrate viscoelasticity

Kalpana Mandal
University of Pennsylvania
Apr 16, 2021
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Soft Capricious Matter: The collective behavior of particles with “noisy” interactions

Bulbul Chakraborty
Brandeis University
Oct 21, 2020

Diversity in the natural world emerges from the collective behavior of large numbers of interacting objects. Statistical physics provides the framework relating microscopic to macroscopic properties. A fundamental assumption underlying this approach is that we have complete knowledge of the interactions between the microscopic entities. But what if that, even though possible in principle becomes impossible in practice ? Can we still construct a framework for describing their collective behavior ? Dense suspensions and granular materials are two often quoted examples where we face this challenge. These are systems where because of the complicated surface properties of particles there is extreme sensitivity of the interactions to particle positions. In this talk, I will present a perspective based on notions of constraint satisfaction that provides a way forward. I will focus on our recent work on the emergence of elasticity in the absence of any broken symmetry, and sketch out other problems that can be addressed using this perspective.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Flow, fluctuate and freeze: Epithelial cell sheets as soft active matter

Silke Henkes
University of Bristol
Sep 16, 2020

Epithelial cell sheets form a fundamental role in the developing embryo, and also in adult tissues including the gut and the cornea of the eye. Soft and active matter provides a theoretical and computational framework to understand the mechanics and dynamics of these tissues.I will start by introducing the simplest useful class of models, active brownian particles (ABPs), which incorporate uncoordinated active crawling over a substrate and mechanical interactions. Using this model, I will show how the extended ’swirly’ velocity fluctuations seen in sheets on a substrate can be understood using a simple model that couples linear elasticity with disordered activity. We are able to quantitatively match experiments using in-vitro corneal epithelial cells.Adding a different source of activity, cell division and apoptosis, to such a model leads to a novel 'self-melting' dense fluid state. Finally, I will discuss a direct application of this simple particle-based model to the steady-state spiral flow pattern on the mouse cornea.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Synthetic swimmers: microorganism swimming without microorganisms

Roberto Zenit
Brown University
Sep 2, 2020

The effect of non Newtonian liquid rheology on the swimming performance of microorganisms is still poorly understood, despite numerous recent studies. In our effort to clarify some aspects of this problem, we have developed a series of magnetic synthetic swimmers that self-propel immersed in a fluid by emulating the swimming strategy of flagellated microorganisms. With these devices, it is possible to control some aspects of the motion with the objective to isolate specific effects. In this talk, recent results on the effects of shear-thinning viscosity and viscoelasticity on the motion of helical swimmers will presented and discussed. Also, a number of other new uses of the synthetic swimmers will be presented including swimming across gradients, swimming in sand, interactions and rheometry.

elasticity coverage

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