COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Isaac Newton Institute Seminar Series > Function spaces meet material science: Orlicz-Sobolev nematic elastomers
Function spaces meet material science: Orlicz-Sobolev nematic elastomersAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact INI IT. DNMW03 - Optimal design of soft matter - including a celebration of Women in Materials Science (WMS) In the last decade, models for nematic elastomers and magnetoelasticity has been extensively studied. These models consider both an elastic term where a polyconvex energy density is composed with an unknown state variable defined in the deformed configuration, and a functional corresponding to the nematic energy (or the exchange and magnetostatic energies in magnetoelasticity) where the energy density is integrated over the deformed configuration. In order to obtain the desired compactness and lower semicontinuity, one has to face the regularity requirement that maps create no new surface. I'll discuss that this in fact the case for maps whose gradients are in an Orlicz class with an integrability just above the space dimension minus one. The results presented in this talk have been obtained in collaboration with Duvan Henao (Pontificia Universidad Cat\'olica de Chile). This talk is part of the Isaac Newton Institute Seminar Series series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsInstitute for Energy and Environmental Flows (IEEF) assyrian Ignored Arab Christian Voices: Contextual Theology in the Era of Colonial ModernityOther talksEarly modern history of data and epistemology of form State Space Collapse in Resource Allocation for Demand Dispatch Vibroacoustics research and development at wave6 The Economics of Religion in India The early origins of the Mortality Revolution: a perspective from evolutionary biology |