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Landscapes in Physics and Biology

Landscapes in Physics and Biology

Date6th Mar 2020

Time10:30 PM

Venue Central Lecture Theatre

PAST EVENT

Details

The use of the word "landscape" is common to very different fields, e.g. the free energy landscape in spin glasses, rugged landscapes in complex systems, the fitness or adaptive landscape in evolutionary theory, and the epigenetic landscape in stem cell biology. In at least some
of these cases, the use of the word carries with it a visual idea that makes qualitative arguments easier to understand. In recent work, we have been trying to understand and model recent experiments on the mechanical properties of stem cell nuclei, which can exhibit an unusual property
called auxeticity. (If you squeeze a balloon in one direction, it expands in the perpendicular direction - auxetics do the opposite.) Apart from providing an explanation for why mouse stem cells are auxetic, our work hints at the power of landscape paradigms, in this case the idea of an
epigenetic landscape, to further conceptual understanding in both physics and biology.

Speakers

Prof. Gautam Menon

Physics