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

Julia Yeomans OBE FRS

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Biological physics

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics

Research groups

  • Condensed Matter Theory
Julia.Yeomans@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)76884 (college),01865 (2)73992
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, room 70.10
www-thphys.physics.ox.ac.uk/people/JuliaYeomans
  • About
  • Publications

Fluid flows on many scales

NATURE PHYSICS 17:6 (2021) 756-756
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Active extensile stress promotes 3D director orientations and flows

(2021)

Authors:

Mehrana R Nejad, Julia M Yeomans

Abstract:

We use numerical simulations and linear stability analysis to study an active nematic layer where the director is allowed to point out of the plane. Our results highlight the difference between extensile and contractile systems. Contractile stress suppresses the flows perpendicular to the layer and favours in-plane orientations of the director. By contrast, extensile stress promotes instabilities that can turn the director out of the plane, leaving behind a population of distinct, in-plane regions that continually elongate and divide. This supports extensile forces as a mechanism for the initial stages of layer formation in living systems, and we show that a planar drop with extensile (contractile) activity grows into three dimensions (remains in two dimensions). The results also explain the propensity of disclination lines in three dimensional active nematics to be of twist-type in extensile or wedge-type in contractile materials.
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Active extensile stress promotes 3D director orientations and flows

(2021)

Authors:

Mehrana R Nejad, Julia M Yeomans
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Activity pulses induce spontaneous flow reversals in viscoelastic environments.

Journal of the Royal Society, Interface The Royal Society 18:177 (2021) ARTN 20210100

Authors:

Emmanuel LC Vi M Plan, Julia M Yeomans, Amin Doostmohammadi

Abstract:

Complex interactions between cellular systems and their surrounding extracellular matrices are emerging as important mechanical regulators of cell functions, such as proliferation, motility and cell death, and such cellular systems are often characterized by pulsating actomyosin activities. Here, using an active gel model, we numerically explore spontaneous flow generation by activity pulses in the presence of a viscoelastic medium. The results show that cross-talk between the activity-induced deformations of the viscoelastic surroundings and the time-dependent response of the active medium to these deformations can lead to the reversal of spontaneously generated active flows. We explain the mechanism behind this phenomenon based on the interaction between the active flow and the viscoelastic medium. We show the importance of relaxation time scales of both the polymers and the active particles and provide a phase space over which such spontaneous flow reversals can be observed. Our results suggest new experiments investigating the role of controlled pulses of activity in living systems ensnared in complex mircoenvironments.
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Morphology of Active Deformable 3D Droplets

PHYSICAL REVIEW X American Physical Society (APS) 11:2 (2021) 21001

Authors:

Liam J Ruskee, Julia M Yeomans

Abstract:

We numerically investigate the morphology and disclination line dynamics of active nematic droplets in three dimensions. Although our model incorporates only the simplest possible form of achiral active stress, active nematic droplets display an unprecedented range of complex morphologies. For extensile activity, fingerlike protrusions grow at points where disclination lines intersect the droplet surface. For contractile activity, however, the activity field drives cup-shaped droplet invagination, run-and-tumble motion, or the formation of surface wrinkles. This diversity of behavior is explained in terms of an interplay between active anchoring, active flows, and the dynamics of the motile disclination lines. We discuss our findings in the light of biological processes such as morphogenesis, collective cancer invasion, and the shape control of biomembranes, suggesting that some biological systems may share the same underlying mechanisms as active nematic droplets.
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