Topological structure and dynamics of three-dimensional active nematics

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DOI10.5281/zenodo.5113566Zenodo5113566MaRDI QIDQ6708527FDOQ6708527

Dataset published at Zenodo repository.

Thomas Powers, Vincenzo Vitelli, Michael F. Hagan, Thomas R. Powers, Itamar Kolvin, Federico Toschi, Michael Hagan, Guillaume Duclos, Minu Varghese, Aparna Baskaran, Raymond Adkins, Zvonimir Dogic, Daniel Beller, Robert A. Pelcovits, Matthew Peterson, Robert Pelcovits, Debarghya Banerjee, Sebastian Streichan, Sebastian J. Streichan, Arvind Baskaran, Matthew S. E. Peterson

Publication date: 19 March 2020



Topological structures are effective descriptors of the nonequilibrium dynamics of diverse many-body systems. For example, motile, point-like topological defects capture the salient features of two-dimensional active liquid crystals composed of energy-consuming anisotropic units. We dispersed force-generating microtubule bundles in a passive colloidal liquid crystal to form a three-dimensional active nematic. Light-sheet microscopy revealed the temporal evolution of the millimeter-scale structure of these active nematics with single-bundle resolution. The primary topological excitations are extended, charge-neutral disclination loops that undergo complex dynamics and recombination events. Our work suggests a framework for analyzing the nonequilibrium dynamics of bulk anisotropic systems as diverse as driven complex fluids, active metamaterials, biological tissues, and collections of robots or organisms.







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