| 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 > DAMTP Statistical Physics and Soft Matter Seminar > Screw Symmetry and Chiral Hydrodynamics
Screw Symmetry and Chiral HydrodynamicsAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Balázs Németh. Active cholesterics are chiral in both their structure, which has continuous screw symmetry, and their active stresses, which include contributions from torque dipoles. Both expressions of chirality give rise to curl forces in the hydrodynamics, which we derive from the active Ericksen-Leslie equations using a geometric approach. This clarifies the hydrodynamics of continuous screw symmetry and provides an example of generalised odd elastic forces that originate from an equilibrium free energy. For the active instability, screw symmetry generates a contribution of chiral activity to the linearised pseudolayer hydrodynamics that is absent in materials with chiral activity but achiral structure and produces an active instability that is sensitive to the cholesteric handedness. Finally, as time allows, I will discuss the chiral hydrodynamics of materials with three-dimensional screw symmetry. This is joint work with SJ Kole, Ananyo Maitra and Sriram Ramaswamy. This talk is part of the DAMTP Statistical Physics and Soft Matter Seminar series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsMajor Public Lectures in Cambridge All Biological Anthropology Seminars and Events Autism GeneticsOther talksModelling tyre-belt vibrations at acoustic frequencies Expansion, divisibility and parity Singular inertial waves Linear Estimation of Structural and Causal Effects for Nonseparable Panel Data Remodelling the septin cytoskeleton for cytokinesis in budding yeast Interested in Catalysis ? Biology sets ultimate goals, from electrocatalysts to tandem++ cascades in mesoporous materials |