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Systèmes Complexes et Phénomènes Nonlinéaires
(26) Production(s) de l'année 2017
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Physical modeling of active bacterial DNA segregation
Auteur(s): Walter J.-C.
Conference: Quantitative Methods in Gene Regulation IV (Cambridge, GB, 2017-12-18)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-01881265_v1
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: Efficient bacterial chromosome segregation typically requires the coordinated action of a three-component, fueled by adenosine triphosphate machinery called the partition complex. We present a phenomenological model accounting for the dynamic activity of this system that is also relevant for the physics of catalytic particles in active environments. The model is obtained by coupling simplelinear reaction-diffusion equations with a proteophoresis, or “volumetric” chemophoresis, force field that arises from protein-protein interactions and provides a physically viable mechanism for complex translocation. This minimal description captures most known experimental observations: dynamic oscillations of complex components, complex separation and subsequent symmetricalpositioning. The predictions of our model are in phenomenological agreement with and provide substantial insight into recent experiments. From a non-linear physics view point, this system explores the active separation of matter at micrometric scales with a dynamical instability between static positioning and travelling wave regimes triggered by the dynamical spontaneous breaking ofrotational symmetry.
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Linear and Weakly Nonlinear Models of Wind Generated Surface Waves in Finite Depth
Auteur(s): Latifi A., Manna M., Montalvo P., Ruivo M.
(Article) Publié:
Journal Of Applied Fluid Mechanics, vol. 10 p.1829-1843 (2017)
Ref HAL: hal-01653592_v1
DOI: 10.18869/acadpub.jafm.73.243.27597
WoS: WOS:000413507000030
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: This work regards the extension of the Miles’ and Jeffreys’ theories of growth of wind-waves in water of finite depth. It is divided in two major sections. The first one corresponds to the surface water waves in a linear regimes and the second one to the surface water waver considered in a weak nonlinear, dispersive and anti-dissipative regime. In the linear regime, we extend the Miles’ theory of wind wave amplification to finite depth. The dispersion relation provides a wave growth rate depending to depth. A dimensionless water depth parameter depending to depth and a characteristic wind speed, induces a family of curves representing the wave growth as a function of the wave phase velocity and the wind speed. We obtain a good agreementbetween our theoretical results and the data from the Australian Shallow Water Experiment as well as the data from the Lake George experiment. In a weakly nonlinear regime the evolution of wind waves in finitedepth is reduced to an anti-dissipative Korteweg-de Vries-Burgers equation and its solitary wave solution is exhibited. Anti-dissipation phenomenon accelerates the solitary wave and increases its amplitude whichleads to its blow-up and breaking. Blow-up is a nonlinear, dispersive and anti-dissipative phenomenon which occurs in finite time. A consequence of anti-dissipation is that any solitary waves’ adjacent planes of constants phases acquire different velocities and accelerations and ends to breaking which occurs in finite space and in a finite time prior to the blow-up. It worth remarking that the theoretical amplitude growth breaking time are both testable in the usual experimental facilities. At the end, in the context of windforced waves in finite depth, the nonlinear Schr ̈odinger equation is derived and for weak wind inputs, the Akhmediev, Peregrine and Kuznetsov-Ma breather solutions are obtained
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Voltage-activated transport of ions through single-walled carbon nanotubes
Auteur(s): Yazda K., Tahir S., Michel T., Loubet Bastien, Manghi Manoel, Bentin Jeremy, Picaud Fabien, Palmeri J., Henn F., Jourdain V.
(Article) Publié:
Nanoscale, vol. 9 p.11976-11986 (2017)
Ref HAL: hal-01586169_v1
DOI: 10.1039/c7nr02976d
WoS: WOS:000408435400019
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
13 Citations
Résumé: Ionic transport through single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is promising for many applications but remains both experimentally challenging and highly debated. Here we report ionic current measurements through microfluidic devices containing one or several SWCNTs of diameter of 1.2 to 2 nm unexpectedly showing a linear or a voltage-activated I-V dependence. Transition from an activated to a linear behavior, and stochastic fluctuations between different current levels were notably observed. For linear devices, the high conductance confirmed with different chloride salts indicates that the nanotube/water interface exhibits both a high surface charge density and flow slippage, in agreement with previous reports. In addition, the sublinear dependence of the conductance on the salt concentration points toward a charge-regulation mechanism. Theoretical modelling and computer simulations show that the voltage-activated behavior can be accounted for by the presence of local energy barriers along or at the ends of the nanotube. Raman spectroscopy reveals strain fluctuations along the tubes induced by the polymer matrix but displays insufficient doping or variations of doping to account for the apparent surface charge density and energy barriers revealed by ion transport measurements. Finally, experimental evidence points toward environment-sensitive chemical moieties at the nanotube mouths as being responsible for the energy barriers causing the activated transport of ions through SWCNTs within this diameter range.
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Non-Markovian dynamics of reaction coordinate in polymer folding
Auteur(s): Sakaue Takahiro, Walter J.-C., Carlon Enrico, Vanderzande Carlo
(Article) Publié:
Soft Matter, vol. 13 p.317 (2017)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-01493264_v1
Ref Arxiv: 1702.06804
DOI: 10.1039/c7sm00395a
WoS: 000400876600012
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
6 Citations
Résumé: We develop a theoretical description of the critical zipping dynamics of a self-folding polymer. We use tension propagation theory and the formalism of the generalized Langevin equation applied to a polymer that contains two complementary parts which can bind to each other. At the critical temperature, the (un)zipping is unbiased and the two strands open and close as a zipper. The number of closed base pairs $n(t)$ displays a subdiffusive motion characterized by a variance growing as $\langle \Delta n^2(t) \rangle \sim t^\alpha$ with $\alpha < 1$ at long times. Our theory provides an estimate of both the asymptotic anomalous exponent $\alpha$ and of the subleading correction term, which are both in excellent agreement with numerical simulations. The results indicate that the tension propagation theory captures the relevant features of the dynamics and shed some new insights on related polymer problems characterized by anomalous dynamical behavior.
Commentaires: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted
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Surfing on protein waves: proteophoresis as a mechanism for bacterial genome partitioning
Auteur(s): Walter J.-C., Dorignac J., Lorman V., Rech Jérôme, Bouet Jean-Yves, Nollmann Marcelo, Palmeri J., Parmeggiani A., Geniet F.
(Article) Publié:
Physical Review Letters, vol. 119 p.028101 (2017)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-01493262_v1
Ref Arxiv: 1702.07372
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.028101
WoS: 000405367800016
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
14 Citations
Résumé: Efficient bacterial chromosome segregation typically requires the coordinated action of a three-component machinery, fueled by adenosine triphosphate, called the partition complex. We present a phenomenological model accounting for the dynamic activity of this system that is also relevant for the physics of catalytic particles in active environments. The model is obtained by coupling simple linear reaction-diffusion equations with a proteophoresis, or “volumetric” chemophoresis, force field that arises from protein-protein interactions and provides a physically viable mechanism for complex translocation. This minimal description captures most known experimental observations: dynamic oscillations of complex components, complex separation, and subsequent symmetrical positioning. The predictions of our model are in phenomenological agreement with and provide substantial insight into recent experiments. From a nonlinear physics view point, this system explores the active separation of matter at micrometric scales with a dynamical instability between static positioning and traveling wave regimes triggered by the dynamical spontaneous breaking of rotational symmetry.
Commentaires: 6 pages, 3 figures
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