Monday, September 19 |
07:00 - 08:45 |
Breakfast ↓ Breakfast is served daily between 7 and 9am in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
08:45 - 09:00 |
Introduction and Welcome by BIRS Staff ↓ A brief introduction to BIRS with important logistical information, technology instruction, and opportunity for participants to ask questions. (TCPL 201) |
09:00 - 10:00 |
Karen Daniels: Building Networks (In Fact, I'm Actually Building Networks) ↓ I will talk about research from my lab in which we build networks of various sorts, using granular materials, laser cutters, and additive manufacturing (3D printing). Our past work has focused on understanding how rigidity arises, and sometimes fails, and how disordered materials often contain both rigid and floppy subnetworks. I will talk about 3 frameworks capable of connecting the internal structure of disordered materials to their rigidity and/or failure under loading, and describe how my collaborators and I have applied these frameworks. These are, in order of increasing physics content: (1) centrality within an adjacency matrix describing its connectivity, (2) Maxwell constraint counting on the full network of frictional contact forces, and (3) the vibrational modes of a synthetic dynamical matrix (Hessian). The first two rely primarily on topology, and the second two include more information about the physics. All three methods, while successfully elucidating the origins of rigidity and brittle vs. ductile failure, also provide interesting counterpoints regarding how much information is enough to make predictions. In keeping with the spirit of the conference, I will also talk about the networks of women+ who have made this work possible. (Online) |
10:00 - 10:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Daphne Klotsa: A touch of non-linearity: mesoscale swimmers and active matter in fluids ↓ Living matter, such as biological tissue, can be seen as a nonequilibrium hierarchical assembly of assemblies of smaller and smaller active components, where energy is consumed at many scales. The functionality and versatility of such living or "active-matter" systems render it a promising candidate to study and to synthetically design. While many active-matter systems reside in fluids (solution, blood, ocean, air), so far, studies that include hydrodynamic interactions have focussed on microscopic scales in Stokes flows, where the active particles are <100μm and the Reynolds number, Re <<1. At those microscopic scales viscosity dominates and inertia can be neglected. However, what happens as swimmers slightly increase in size (say ~0.1mm-100cm) or as they form larger aggregates and swarms? The system then enters the intermediate Reynolds regime where both inertia and viscosity play a role, and where nonlinearities in the fluid are introduced. In this talk, I will present a simple model swimmer used to understand the transition from Stokes to intermediate Reynolds numbers, first for a single swimmer, then for pairwise interactions and finally for collective behavior. We show that, even for a simple model, inertia can induce hydrodynamic interactions that generate novel phase behavior, steady states and transitions. (Online) |
11:00 - 11:30 |
Katie Newhall: Effective thermal equilibrium induced by crosslinking proteins in polymer chromosome model ↓ Biological systems under the influence of microscale active agents such as proteins are frequently modeled using switching forces as the agents shift between different states, pushing the system out of equilibirium. For example, protein action plays a crucial role in the organization of the DNA inside the cell nucleus, modeled by a bead-spring polymer, in the form of stochastic crosslinking. Despite these rapidly switching forces causing a constant state of disequilibrium, we observed in numerical simulations long-lived stable condensed clusters of beads consistent with experimental results, with the stochastic switching rate acting like an effective temperature. Rapid switching produced low-temperature-like stable clusters, slow switching produced high-temperature-like amorphic arrangements, and intermediate switching times allowed for dynamic clusters with beads exchanging between clusters. To explain the mechanism behind this emergent clustering behavior, we derive an effective thermal equilibrium that captures both the average force and fluctuations induced by the stochastically switching force, accurately predicting the mean transition time between stable configurations. (TCPL 201) |
11:30 - 13:00 |
Lunch ↓ Lunch is served daily between 11:30am and 1:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
13:00 - 14:00 |
Guided Tour of The Banff Centre ↓ Meet in the PDC front desk for a guided tour of The Banff Centre campus. (PDC Front Desk) |
14:00 - 14:20 |
Group Photo ↓ Meet in foyer of TCPL to participate in the BIRS group photo. The photograph will be taken outdoors, so dress appropriately for the weather. Please don't be late, or you might not be in the official group photo! (TCPL Foyer) |
14:20 - 15:00 |
Nancy Rodriguez: Problem Pitches and Discussion (TCPL 201) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
15:30 - 17:00 |
Nancy Rodriguez: Problem Pitches and Discussion (TCPL 201) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner ↓ A buffet dinner is served daily between 5:30pm and 7:30pm in Vistas Dining Room, top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |