10/25/2017 10:42 AM EDT
Imagine a tiny doughnut-shaped droplet, covered with wriggling worms. The worms are packed so tightly together that they locally line up, forming a nematic liquid crystal similar to those found in flat panel displays. In the journal Nature Physics, scientists are reporting on an examination of such an active nematic--but with flexible filaments and microscopic engines rather than worms. Source Georgia Institute of Technology
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Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Wriggling microtubules help understand coupling of 'active' defects and curvature
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