ABSTRACTS
              
              Richard Brak, The University of Melbourne
                Directed path models of certain polymer phase transitions
                I will review a range of directed path models of certain polymer 
                phase transition problems, in particular, polymer collapse using 
                interacting partially directed paths, polymer absorption onto 
                a surface by Motzkin paths, and sensitized flocculation and steric 
                stabilization using Dyck paths interacting with a pair of surfaces. 
                I will also discuss some unexpected applications of these results 
                to a non-equilibrium problem, that of the simple asymmetric exclusion 
                processes, and to an equilibrium model, that of directed compact 
                percolation. This talk will have a strong combinatorial flavour.
              Hugues Chaté, CEA
                 Collective properties of active polar and nematic particles
                Active or self-propelled particles are in fashion today in 
                models for the collective motion of animals, bacteria, cells, 
                molecular motors, as well as driven granular matter or even for 
                the swarming behavior of robots. I will review recent results 
                obtained on minimal microscopic models of interacting polar and 
                apolar (nematic) active particles, stressing the (probably) universal 
                properties of the emerging collective dynamics. If time allows, 
                recent proposals for mesoscopic descriptions of these systems 
                will be discussed.
              Giovanni Ciccotti, Università degli Studi di Roma-"La 
                Sapienza"
                Minimum free energy paths and "isocommittor" 
                surfaces
                A computational technique is proposed which combines the string 
                method with a sampling technique to determine minimum free energy 
                paths. The technique only requires to compute the mean force and 
                another conditional expectation locally along the string, and 
                therefore can be applied even if the number of collective variables 
                kept in the free energy calculation is large. This is in contrast 
                with other free energy sampling techniques which aim at mapping 
                the full free energy landscape and whose cost increases exponentially 
                with the number of collective variables kept in the free energy. 
                Provided that the number of collective variables is large enough, 
                the new technique captures the mechanism of transition in that 
                it allows to determine the committor function for the reaction 
                and, in particular, the transition state region. The new technique 
                is illustrated on the example of alanine dipeptide, in which we 
                compute the minimum free energy path for the isomerization transition 
                using either two or four dihedral angles as collective variables. 
                It is shown that the mechanism of transition can be captured using 
                the four dihedral angles, but not using only two of them.
              David Coker, Boston University
                Modeling electronic and vibrational pure dephasing and dissipation 
                dynamics in condensed phase systems
                A path integral approach using a discrete representation for 
                the quantum subsystem is implemented by linearizing in the difference 
                between forward and backward paths for the continuous solvent 
                degrees of freedom, and employing a full mapping Hamiltonian description 
                for the discrete quantum subsystem states. The approach is employed 
                to study electronic and vibrational dephasing in a realistic model 
                of complex many-body systems that can be probed in experiments 
                exploring, for example, the microscopic mechanism of how superposition 
                states of the quantum subsystem undergo decoherence due to entanglement 
                with their environment. Understanding decoherence mechanisms, 
                the factors that affect these quantum processes, and how they 
                might be controlled by molecular level engineering is important 
                if advances are to be made in applications of quantum information 
                theory with molecular systems, for example. The studies will address 
                vibrational quantum decoherence effects in the presence of both 
                weak and strong dissipation, and also explore how such phenomena 
                are influenced by avoided crossings and conical intersections 
                in realistic models including decoherence of a vibrational superposition 
                state of electronically excited halogen molecules in condensed 
                rare gas environments where recent detailed experiments are available. 
              
              Joern Davidsen, University of Calgary
                Filament-induced surface spiral turbulence
                Surface defect-mediated turbulence in bounded three-dimensional 
                (3D) excitable media is investigated in the regime of negative 
                line tension. In this regime turbulence arises due to unstable 
                filaments associated with scroll waves and is purely a 3D phenomenon. 
                In this talk, I will show that the statistical properties of the 
                turbulent defect dynamics can be used to distinguish surface defect-mediated 
                turbulence from its 2D analog. Mechanisms for the creation and 
                annihilation of surface defects will be discussed and generalizations 
                of Markov rate equations are employed to model the results.
              Frank den Hollander, Universiteit Leiden
                Copolymers in solution
                This talk describes a model for a random copolymer in a random 
                emulsion that was introduced in a recent paper with Stu Whittington. 
                The copolymer is a two-dimensional directed self-avoiding walk, 
                carrying a random concatenation of monomers of two types A and 
                B, each occurring with density ½ . The emulsion is a random 
                mixture of liquids of two types, A and B, organized in large square 
                blocks occurring with density p and 1-p, respectively where p 
                (0,1). The polymer in the emulsion has an energy that is minus 
                times the number of AA-matches minus times the number of BB-matches, 
                where , R are interaction parameters that may be restricted to 
                the cone {( , ) R2 : | |}.
              We consider the quenched free energy per monomer in the limit 
                as the length n of the polymer tends to infinity and the blocks 
                in the emulsion have size Ln such that Ln and Ln/n 0. To make 
                the model mathematically tractable, we assume that the polymer 
                can only enter and exit a pair of neighbouring blocks at diagonally 
                opposite corners. Although this is an unphysical restriction, 
                it turns out that the model exhibits rich and physically relevant 
                behaviour.
              Let pc 0.64 be the critical probability for directed bond percolation 
                on the square lattice. We show that for p pc there is a localization 
                vs. delocalization phase transition along one (!) critical curve 
                in the cone, which turns out to be independent of p, while for 
                p < pc there are three (!) critical curves, all of which depend 
                on p. We derive a number of qualitative and quantitative properties 
                of these curves.
                (This is joint work with Nicolas Pétrélis and Stu 
                Whittington.)
              Rashmi Desai, University of Toronto
                Epitaxial Growth in coherent, strained, asymmetric alloy films
                I shall report on our recent work on epitaxial growth and 
                surface instabilities in coherent, strained, asymmetric alloy 
                films. A nonequilibrium continuum model is used to explore coupling 
                of alloy segregation instability and morphological instability 
                which arises from lattice mismatch and other elastic effects. 
                Even though the model has interesting nonlinearities, interesting 
                effects occur even in linear approximation (valid for thin films). 
                I shall also discuss application to some real materials.
              Leon Glass, McGill University
                Predicting and Preventing Sudden Cardiac Death
                Sudden cardiac death kills hundreds of thousands of North 
                Americans each year. This number could be reduced significantly 
                if a medical device -- the implantable cardiac defibrillator -- 
                had been implanted prior to the sudden death. However, since we 
                do not have good ways of predicting who will suffer sudden cardiac 
                death or when, physicians face a major problem in deciding in 
                whom to implant a cardiac defibrillator. This problem is made 
                more severe since implantable cardiac defibrillators are expensive, 
                and complications, though rare, do add to the risk of using the 
                devices in those who would not benefit. In this talk I will describe 
                attempts to understand cardiac arrhythmias -- especially those 
                responsible for sudden cardiac death. The methods include analysis 
                of electrocardiographic records of patients who experienced sudden 
                cardiac death, analysis of arrhythmias in German Shepherd dogs 
                that experience sudden cardiac death, recording activity in tissue 
                culture models of cardiac arrhythmias, and the formulation of 
                mathematical models of cardiac arrhythmia employing a range of 
                techniques from number theory to nonlinear dynamics.
              Tony Guttman, University of Melbourne
                Role of conformational entropy in force-induced bio-polymer 
                unfolding
                A statistical mechanical description of flexible and semi-flexible 
                polymer chains in a poor solvent is developed in the constant 
                force and constant distance ensembles. The existence of many intermediate 
                states at low temperatures stabilized by the force is found. A 
                unified response of pulling and compressing force has been obtained 
                in the constant distance ensemble. We show the signature of a 
                cross-over length which increases linearly with the chain length. 
                Below this cross-over length, the critical force of unfolding 
                decreases with temperature, while above it increases with temperature. 
                For stiff chains, we report for the first time a "saw-tooth" 
                like behavior in the force-extension curves which has been seen 
                earlier in the case of protein unfolding.
                (Joint work with Sanjay Kumar, Iwan Jensen and Jesper L. Jacobsen.) 
              
              James T. Hynes, University of Colorado and Ecole 
                Normale Supérieure, Paris
                Solvation and photochemical funnels: Environmental effects on 
                conical intersection structure and dynamics
              Excited electronic state processes at conical intersections (CIs) 
                have received intense scrutiny in photochemical experiment and 
                theory in recent years. CIs often provide a "funnel" 
                for (often ultrafast) passage from a photochemically accessed 
                S1 state to the ground state S0, governing nonadiabatic transition 
                rates; they have been referred to as "transition states" 
                for photochemical processes.
              Recent experiments on, e.g., photoactive proteins highlight the 
                pronounced influence of a solvent or protein nanospace environment 
                on CI dynamics. S1-S0 population transfer can be substantially 
                modified, suggesting major changes in the underlying CI topology 
                and dynamics. A central theoretical challenge is to select and 
                describe the relevant features governing the complex chromophore-environment 
                supermolecular systems.
              The present contribution focuses on excited electronic state 
                processes at CIs where a charge transfer is involved. We describe 
                the key features of a theoretical formulation recently developed 
                to describe the chromophore-environment interaction and its consequences. 
                This generalizes considerably an early important treatment by 
                Bonacic-Koutecky, Koutecky and Michl to include important molecular 
                coordinates, e.g., isomerization twisting motions, and the polar/polarizable 
                environment's influence. The environment's electrostatic effects 
                are accounted for by a dielectric continuum model. Applications 
                to a model for the S1-S0 CI in protonated Schiff bases provide 
                a free energy surfaces description for the coupled system represented 
                by molecular coordinates (e.g., twisting and bond stretching/contracting) 
                plus a solvent coordinate. The environment's significant impact 
                on the CI is investigated, as are "reaction paths" and 
                the dynamics leading to and through the CI. Nonequilibrium "solvation" 
                effects are shown to be critical.
                (This work has been carried out in collaboration with Irene Burghardt 
                (ENS, Paris), Riccardo Spezia (ENS, Paris), Joao Malhado (ENS, 
                Paris) and L. Cederbaum (Heidelberg).)
              Jennifer Lee, University of Toronto
                Collapse transition in the presence of an applied force
                This talk will focus on a collapse transition of a linear 
                homopolymer in dilute solution in the presence of an applied force. 
                An interacting partially self-avoiding walk (IPDSAW) model was 
                used to describe the system conditions, with energy and applied 
                force variables associated with the near-neighbour contacts in 
                the walk. Exact expressions were generated, where the analytic 
                structure of such expressions will be presented. Theoretical results 
                were then used as a comparison model for investigating a collapse 
                transition in single molecule experiments. Force spectroscopy 
                obtained using AFM generated single molecule force-extension profiles 
                and will be presented.
                (This work is carried out in collaboration with S. G. Whittington, 
                R. Brak, A. J. Guttmann and G. C. Walker.)
              Neal Madras, York University
                Polymers on hyperbolic lattices
                This talk discusses traditional lattice models of polymers 
                (self-avoiding walks, lattice trees, and lattice animals) on "non-Euclidean 
                lattices", specifically graphs that correspond to regular 
                tilings of the hyperbolic plane (or 3-space). One example is the 
                infinite planar graph in which every face is a triangle and eight 
                triangles meet at every vertex. On such lattices, these models 
                should exhibit mean field behaviour, as they would in high-dimensional 
                Euclidean space, or, more simply, on an infinite regular tree. 
                We have made progress towards rigorous understanding of these 
                issues, as well as analogous ones for percolation, but some open 
                questions remain.
                (This talk is based on joint work with C. Chris Wu.)
              G. Nicolis and C. Nicolis, Université Libre de 
                Bruxelles
                Nonlinear dynamics and self-organization in the presence of 
                metastable phases
                There is increasing evidence that self-organization phenomena 
                in a variety of nanosize materials occur in the presence of metastable 
                phases. This switches on non-standard nucleation mechanisms with 
                combined structural and density fluctuations, entailing that kinetic 
                effects and nonequilibrium states are playing an important role. 
                In this presentation the effect of metastable phases on the free 
                energy landscape is determined for a class of materials in which 
                the attractive part of interparticle interactions is weak and 
                short-ranged. The kinetics of the fluctuation-induced transitions 
                between the different states, stable as well as metastable, is 
                subsequently analyzed using a generic model involving two order 
                parameters. Conditions are identified under which the transition 
                rate towards the most stable state can be enhanced and the relevance 
                of the results in the crystallization of protein solutions is 
                discussed. 
              Steven Nielsen, University of Texas at Dallas
                Quantifying the surfactant coverage of nanoparticles by molecular 
                dynamics simulation: The physisorbed versus chemisorbed cases
                Potential energy terms are derived for the interactions between 
                surfactants and solvent, and a spherical nanoparticle, which depend 
                parametrically on the nanoparticle radius. The gradient of these 
                potentials with respect to the nanoparticle radius allows the 
                mean force of constraint on the radius to be calculated during 
                a molecular dynamics simulation. This free energy method allows 
                the optimal, or saturated, surfactant coverage to be found. The 
                effects of curvature, surfactant geometry, and chemisorbed versus 
                physisorbed conditions are explored.
              Gian-Luca Oppo, University of Strathclyde
                Spatio-temporal structures in photonics and chemistry
                We compare nonlinear spatio-temporal structures such as patterns, 
                spatial solitons, spirals, defect-mediated turbulence, etc. in 
                prototype models of photonic and chemical systems. Analogies and 
                differences are drawn between systems driven by either diffraction 
                (photonics) or diffusion (chemistry). It is found that while the 
                investigated structures often have very similar nature, their 
                names differ between these two research fields. Typical examples 
                are chemical spirals and optical vortices, chemical spots and 
                cavity solitons. As Gershwin said: "you like potato and I 
                like potahto, you like tomato and I like tomahto".
              
              Garnett Ord, Ryerson University
                Counting oriented rectangles and the propagation of waves
                We propose a simple counting problem involving chains of rectangles 
                on a planar lattice. The boundaries of the chains form a type 
                of random walk with a finite inner scale. With orientation neglected, 
                the continuum limit of the walk densities obeys the Telegraph 
                equation, a form of diffusion equation with a finite signal velocity. 
                Taking into account the orientation of the rectangles, the same 
                continuum limit yields the Dirac equation. This provides an interesting 
                context in which the Dirac equation is phenomenological rather 
                than fundamental.
              
              
              E. Orlandini, Universita degli Studi di Padova
                Directed walk models of polymers stretched by a force
                In recent years, the mechanical properties of individual polymers 
                and filaments have been thoroughly investigated experimentally, 
                thanks to the rapid development of micromanipulation techniques 
                such as optical tweezers and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Experiments 
                such as the stretching of single DNA polymers or the force-induced 
                desorption from an attractive surface enhance the possibility 
                of understanding the physical properties of the single molecule. 
                In order to interpret experiments quantitatively several theoretical 
                models which allow one to calculate the response of a polymer 
                to external forces have recently been introduced and studied by 
                several authors. In this respect, Stu Whittington has been a pioneer 
                in the field through the introduction of simple directed-walk 
                models of polymers, subjected to an elongational force, that are 
                either adsorbed on the surface or localized between two different 
                solvents. 
              In this talk I will review some of these models, showing that, 
                although they are simple enough to be solved analytically, they 
                can catch much of the underlying physics of the problem. Moreover, 
                they can be extended to describe other interesting phenomena such 
                as the mechanical unzipping of double-stranded DNA or the stretching 
                of compact polymers.
              Aleksander Owczarek, University of Melbourne
                Polymers in a slab with attractive walls: Scaling and numerical 
                results
                We summarize the latest results concerning models of polymers 
                in a slab with sticky walls. We present a conjectured scaling 
                theory and numerical confirmation.
              Antonio Politi, CNR
                Chaos without exponential instability
                Since several years, it is known that coupled map models can 
                exhibit pseudochaotic behaviour, even in the absence of a strictly 
                positive maximum Lyapunov exponent. Quite recently some more realistic 
                systems have been identified, where this behaviour can be generated. 
                In particular, I refer to a chain of hard-point particles and 
                to a network of globally coupled leaky integrate-and-fire neurons. 
                The peculiarity of this type of dynamical behaviour and the conditions 
                for its generation will be discussed.
              Andrew Rechnitzer, University of British Columbia
                Mean unknotting times of random knots and embeddings
                We study mean unknotting times of knots and knot embeddings 
                by crossing reversals, in a problem motivated by DNA entanglement. 
                Using self-avoiding polygons (SAPs) and self-avoiding polygon 
                trails (SAPTs) we prove that the mean unknotting time grows exponentially 
                in the length of the SAPT and at least exponentially with the 
                length of the SAP. The proof uses Kesten's pattern theorem, together 
                with results for mean first-passage times in the two-parameter 
                Ehrenfest urn model. We use the pivot algorithm to generate random 
                SAPTs and calculate the corresponding unknotting times, and find 
                that the mean unknotting time grows very slowly even at moderate 
                lengths. Our methods are quite general -- for example the lower 
                bound on the mean unknotting time applies also to Gaussian random 
                polygons.
                (This is work together with Aleks Owcarek and Yao-ban Chan at 
                the University of Melbourne, and Gord Slade at the University 
                of British Columbia.)
              Katrin Rohlf, Ryerson University
                From excitable media on the large scale to reaction-diffusion 
                mechanisms on the small scale
                In honour of Raymond Kapral, this talk will highlight some 
                of our past and current work concerning simulations for reactive 
                media both on the large scale, as well as on the small scale.
              The first part of the talk will be devoted to recent results 
                concerning the self-organizational properties of spiral waves 
                in a FitzHugh-Nagumo system. Such systems have a wide range of 
                physical, chemical and biological applications, and -- in particular 
                --have often been used to describe the electrical activity of 
                heart tissue. Our results have important implications on the proper 
                assessment of drug treatment options for cardiac arrhythmias.
              The talk will conclude with an overview of current work concerning 
                the time evolution of a chemically reacting medium using a particle-based 
                approach. In particular, some results will be presented for a 
                Selkov reactive mechanism in a spatially extended system, and 
                we will show its connection to a stochastic phase-space description 
                for which the total number of particles in the system is not conserved.
              Tom Shiokawa, National Center for Theoretical Sciences
                Non-Markovian dynamics and quantum Brownian motion
              
              Kenneth Showalter, West Virginia University
                Spatiotemporal dynamics of networks of excitable nodes
                A network of excitable nodes based on the photosensitive Belousov-Zhabotinsky 
                reaction is studied in experiments and simulations. The addressable 
                medium allows both local and nonlocal links between the nodes. 
                The initial spread of excitation across the network as well as 
                the asymptotic oscillatory behavior are described. Synchronization 
                of the spatiotemporal dynamics occurs by entrainment to high-frequency 
                network pacemakers formed by excitation loops. Analysis of the 
                asymptotic behavior reveals that the dynamics of the network is 
                governed by a subnetwork selected during the initial transient 
                period. 
                (In collaboration with Aaron J. Steele and Mark Tinsley.)
              Christine Soteros, University of Saskatchewan
                Random copolymer models
                Self-avoiding walk models have been used for about 50 years to 
                study linear polymers (long chain molecules) in dilute solution. 
                For such models, the vertices of the walk represent the monomer 
                units which compose the polymer and an edge of the walk joins 
                two monomer units which are chemically bonded together in the 
                polymer chain. Distinct self-avoiding walks on a lattice, such 
                as the square or simple cubic lattice, represent distinct conformations 
                of the polymer chain. Recently there has been much interest in 
                extending the standard self-avoiding walk model of homopolymers 
                (all monomer units considered identical) to the study of random 
                copolymers. A random copolymer is a polymer composed of several 
                types of comonomers where the specific distribution of these comonomers 
                along the polymer chain is determined by a random process. The 
                comonomer sequence can be thought of as being determined in or 
                by the polymerization process (assumed to involve a random process) 
                but then once determined the sequence of comonomers is fixed; 
                this is an example of what is known as quenched randomness. In 
                the simplest self-avoiding walk model of a random copolymer, one 
                assumes that there are two types of comonomers and that they are 
                distributed independently along the polymer chain. 
              Based on a series of seminal papers by Stu Whittington and others, 
                I will review the progress that has been made using self-avoiding 
                walk models to study phase transitions, such as the absorption 
                phase transition and the localization phase transition, in random 
                copolymer systems. Special emphasis will be placed on recent progress 
                made by us, in collaboration with Stu Whittington, studying bounds 
                on the limiting quenched average free energy for directed walk 
                models such as Dyck and Motzkin paths.
              De Witt Sumners, Florida State University
                Random thoughts about random knotting
                At the interface between statistical mechanics and geometry/topology, 
                one encounters the very interesting problem of length dependence 
                of the spectrum of geometric/topological properties (writhing, 
                knotting, linking, etc.) of randomly embedded graphs. Stu Whittington 
                has been at the forefront of research in this area, and this talk 
                will discuss the proof of the Frisch-Wasserman-Delbruck conjecture 
                (the longer a random circle, the more likely it is to be knotted), 
                with some of its generalizations and scientific applications. 
              
              
              E. J. Janse van Rensburg, York University
                Knotted lattice polygons
                Let pn(K) be the number of lattice polygons of length n and 
                knot type K. It is known that limn [log pn( )]/n = log exists, 
                where K = is the unknot, and is the growth constant of unknotted 
                polygons in the cubic lattice. In addition, < , where is the 
                growth constant of lattice polygons. This result implies that 
                almost all lattice polygons are knotted in the large n limit. 
                In this talk I shall review the statistical and scaling properties 
                of lattice polygons of fixed knot types in the lattice and also 
                in a slab geometry by using rigorous and scaling arguments and 
                by presenting numerical results from Monte Carlo simulations using 
                the BFACF algorithm.
              
              Xiao-Guang (Charles) Wu, Revionics, Inc.
                Ion dynamics in non-perfect quadrupole traps
                Ion dynamics in non-perfect quadrupole traps differ from those 
                in a pure quadrupole field. We obtain an analytic expression for 
                a quadrupole field superimposed with weak, higher-order multipole 
                fields. Single ion dynamics in such trapping fields close to the 
                instability point are investigated. We show that for an in-phase 
                octopole field, oscillating envelopes of the axial displacement 
                grow exponentially with the parameter deviation; whereas for an 
                out-of-phase octopole field the growth of the oscillating envelopes 
                follows a square-root law. A hard-sphere scattering model is assumed 
                to incorporate collisions with buffer-gas molecules. The collision 
                frequency and cross-section are defined. A simulation algorithm 
                for many-ion dynamics is developed based on the Verlet algorithm 
                and Monte Carlo techniques. We show how a weak octopole field 
                affects the mass resolution in a significant way.
              
              Royce Zia, Virginia Tech
                Percolation of a collection of finite random walks: A model 
                for gas permeation through thin polymeric membranes
                Bond percolation on a square lattice is well known. What if 
                the bonds are not randomly distributed, but are correlated somehow? 
                In particular, consider placing a fixed density of (non-self-avoiding) 
                random walks of l bonds on the lattice. How does the critical 
                density depend on l? This problem is motivated by a model for 
                gas transport through thin polymeric films.
              
               
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