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Theoretical physicists working at a blackboard collaboration pod in the Beecroft building.
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Ramin Golestanian

Professor of Theoretical Condensed Matter Physics

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics

Research groups

  • Condensed Matter Theory
Ramin.Golestanian@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 273974
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, room 60.12
Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
Oxford Podcast (2014): Living Matter & Theo Phys
Oxford Podcast (2017): The bacterial Viewpoint
  • About
  • Teaching
  • Publications

Scaling Regimes of Active Turbulence with External Dissipation

Physical Review X American Physical Society (APS) 11:3 (2021) 031065

Authors:

Berta Martínez-Prat, Ricard Alert, Fanlong Meng, Jordi Ignés-Mullol, Jean-François Joanny, Jaume Casademunt, Ramin Golestanian, Francesc Sagués
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Topology Protects Chiral Edge Currents in Stochastic Systems

Physical Review X American Physical Society (APS) 11:3 (2021) 031015

Authors:

Evelyn Tang, Jaime Agudo-Canalejo, Ramin Golestanian
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Transient fluctuation-induced forces in driven electrolytes after an electric field quench

New Journal of Physics IOP Publishing 23:7 (2021) 073034

Authors:

Saeed Mahdisoltani, Ramin Golestanian
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Roadmap on emerging concepts in the physical biology of bacterial biofilms: from surface sensing to community formation.

Physical biology 18:5 (2021)

Authors:

Gerard CL Wong, Jyot D Antani, Pushkar P Lele, Jing Chen, Beiyan Nan, Marco J Kühn, Alexandre Persat, Jean-Louis Bru, Nina Molin Høyland-Kroghsbo, Albert Siryaporn, Jacinta C Conrad, Francesco Carrara, Yutaka Yawata, Roman Stocker, Yves V Brun, Gregory B Whitfield, Calvin K Lee, Jaime de Anda, William C Schmidt, Ramin Golestanian, George A O'Toole, Kyle A Floyd, Fitnat H Yildiz, Shuai Yang, Fan Jin, Masanori Toyofuku, Leo Eberl, Nobuhiko Nomura, Lori A Zacharoff, Mohamed Y El-Naggar, Sibel Ebru Yalcin, Nikhil S Malvankar, Mauricio D Rojas-Andrade, Allon I Hochbaum, Jing Yan, Howard A Stone, Ned S Wingreen, Bonnie L Bassler, Yilin Wu, Haoran Xu, Knut Drescher, Jörn Dunkel

Abstract:

Bacterial biofilms are communities of bacteria that exist as aggregates that can adhere to surfaces or be free-standing. This complex, social mode of cellular organization is fundamental to the physiology of microbes and often exhibits surprising behavior. Bacterial biofilms are more than the sum of their parts: single-cell behavior has a complex relation to collective community behavior, in a manner perhaps cognate to the complex relation between atomic physics and condensed matter physics. Biofilm microbiology is a relatively young field by biology standards, but it has already attracted intense attention from physicists. Sometimes, this attention takes the form of seeing biofilms as inspiration for new physics. In this roadmap, we highlight the work of those who have taken the opposite strategy: we highlight the work of physicists and physical scientists who use physics to engage fundamental concepts in bacterial biofilm microbiology, including adhesion, sensing, motility, signaling, memory, energy flow, community formation and cooperativity. These contributions are juxtaposed with microbiologists who have made recent important discoveries on bacterial biofilms using state-of-the-art physical methods. The contributions to this roadmap exemplify how well physics and biology can be combined to achieve a new synthesis, rather than just a division of labor.
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Synchronization and enhanced catalysis of mechanically coupled enzymes

(2021)

Authors:

Jaime Agudo-Canalejo, Tunrayo Adeleke-Larodo, Pierre Illien, Ramin Golestanian
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