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

Alexander Mietke

Associate Professor of Theoretical Soft Matter and Biophysics

Research theme

  • Biological physics

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics

Research groups

  • Condensed Matter Theory
Telephone: 01865 273956
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, room 70.26
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  • About
  • Publications

Odd electrical circuits

(2025)

Authors:

Harry Walden, Alexander Stegmaier, Jörn Dunkel, Alexander Mietke
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Details from ArXiV

Self-organised dynamics and emergent shape spaces of active isotropic fluid surfaces

ArXiv 2501.17849 (2025)

Authors:

Da Gao, Huayang Sun, Rui Ma, Alexander Mietke
Details from ArXiV

Tissue wrinkles foreshadow cancer

Nature Physics Springer Nature (2025) 1-2
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Scaling behaviour and control of nuclear wrinkling.

Nature physics 19:12 (2023) 1927-1935

Authors:

Jonathan A Jackson, Nicolas Romeo, Alexander Mietke, Keaton J Burns, Jan F Totz, Adam C Martin, Jörn Dunkel, Jasmin Imran Alsous

Abstract:

The cell nucleus is enveloped by a complex membrane, whose wrinkling has been implicated in disease and cellular aging. The biophysical dynamics and spectral evolution of nuclear wrinkling during multicellular development remain poorly understood due to a lack of direct quantitative measurements. Here, we characterize the onset and dynamics of nuclear wrinkling during egg development in the fruit fly when nurse cell nuclei increase in size and display stereotypical wrinkling behavior. A spectral analysis of three-dimensional high-resolution live imaging data from several hundred nuclei reveals a robust asymptotic power-law scaling of angular fluctuations consistent with renormalization and scaling predictions from a nonlinear elastic shell model. We further demonstrate that nuclear wrinkling can be reversed through osmotic shock and suppressed by microtubule disruption, providing tuneable physical and biological control parameters for probing mechanical properties of the nuclear envelope. Our findings advance the biophysical understanding of nuclear membrane fluctuations during early multicellular development.
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Rheology of Suspensions of Flat Elastic Particles.

Physical review letters 131:19 (2023) 194002

Authors:

Jens Eggers, Tanniemola B Liverpool, Alexander Mietke

Abstract:

We consider a suspension of noninteracting flat elastic particles in a Newtonian fluid. We model a flat shape as three beads, carried along by the flow according to Stokes law, and connected by nonlinear springs, chosen such that the energy is quadratic in the area. In analogy with common dumbbell models involving two beads connected by linear springs, we solve the stochastic equations of motion exactly to compute the constitutive law for the stress tensor of a flat elastic particle suspension. A lower convected time derivative naturally arises as part of the constitutive law, but surprisingly the rheological response in strong extensional and strong contracting flows is similar to that of the classical Oldroyd-B model associated with dumbbell suspensions.
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