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Prof
PMMH-ESPCI and Sorbonne University, Paris
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Tuesday, September 22, 2020
10:00 AM America/New_York
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Recorded Seminar
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NYU Soft Matter Seminar
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Understanding individual and macroscopic transport properties of motile micro-organisms in complex environments is a timely question, relevant to many ecological, medical and technological situations. At the fundamental level, this question is also receiving a lot of attention as fluids loaded with swimming micro-organisms has become a rich domain of applications and a conceptual playground for the statistical physics of “active matter”. The existence of microscopic sources of energy borne by the motile character of these micro-swimmers is driving self-organization processes at the origin of original emergent phases and unconventional macroscopic properties leading to revisit many standard concepts in the physics of suspensions. In this presentation, I will report on a recent exploration on the question of spontaneous formation of large scale collective motion in relation with the rheological response of active suspensions. I will also present new experiments showing how the motility of bacteria can be controlled such as to extract work macroscopically.
Eric Clement
Prof
PMMH-ESPCI and Sorbonne University, Paris
Contact & Resources
open source
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