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                Physics/Fields Colloquium 2010-2011
                Organizing Committee: Stephen Morris (Dept. of Physics, 
                  University of Toronto) & Mary Pugh (Toronto)   
                 
               
             
        
 
            
            The goal of the Physics/Fields Colloquium is to feature scientists 
              whose work is of interest to both the physics and the mathematical 
              science community. The series has been running since the Spring 
              of 2007.  
              Usually there is one speaker per semester. Each speaker gives a 
              primary, general talk in the regular physics colloquium venue and, 
              whenever possible, a second, more specialised talk at the Fields 
              Institute. 
            Previous speakers have been Phil Holmes (March 2007), Jun Zhang 
              (October 2007), Andrea Liu (Nov 2008),  
              Ehud Meron (March 2009), Carson Chow (December 2009), and Jane Wang 
              (March 2010). Index of 
              2009-10 seminars 
             
            
               
                 
                  2010-11 
                    Schedule
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                March 
                  9, 2011 
                  3:10 p.m. 
                  Fields Institute, Room 230 
                 | 
                Andy 
                  Ruina (Cornell) 
                  Some Issues in Bipedal locomotion 
                  The coordination of robotic and natural walking and running 
                    is often treated as a complex control problem. In contrast, 
                    I will mention some things that can be inferred from simple 
                    mechanical analysis. As promoted early on by Tom McMahon and 
                    then Tad McGeer, walking gaits can be generated by machines 
                    with no control. These machines use relatively little energy 
                    and, like many bicycles, can have a measure of self-stability. 
                    However, the hypothesis that natural gaits might be largely 
                    passive is close in some ways, but not identical to, the stronger 
                    and more biologically interesting hypothesis that natural 
                    gaits minimize energy use. The talk includes videos of robots, 
                    some heuristic explanations, and a few equations. 
                  Bio: Andy Ruina got three degrees from Brown University in 
                    Engineering. He studied friction, fracture, collisions, bicycles 
                    and the mechanics of walking. His lab made the most energy 
                    stingy walking robot and also a robot that walked 14.3 miles 
                    without human contact or refueling. He spends his summers 
                    in on an island in SouthWest Finland near Stockholm where 
                    is wife studies wasps that lay eggs in baby butterflies. Google 
                    ruina. 
                   
                   
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                March 
                  10, 2011 
                  4:10 p.m. 
                  MP 102 | 
                Andy 
                  Ruina (Cornell) 
                  Rotation with zero angular momentum: Demonstrations of the 
                  falling cat phenomenon go sour
It is well known that a system with zero angular momentum 
                    can, by appropriate deformations, rotate while always maintaining 
                    the condition of zero angular momentum. This effect explains 
                    how a cat that is dropped while upside down can turn over 
                    and of how certain gymnastic maneuvers are performed. These 
                    rotations are taken as a demonstration of the "non-integrability" 
                    of a "non-holonomic" constraint. There is a simple 
                    demonstration of this rotation-with-zero-angular-momentum 
                    effect with a rotating platform. But the demonstration often 
                    doesn't work because most floors are not perfectly flat. I 
                    found a simple better demonstration experiment. Unfortunately, 
                    the experiment came out all wrong for different reasons. But 
                    I figured out why and did a second demonstration experiment. 
                    And that came out wrong exactly in the opposite way. 
                  The talk presents the four puzzles: a) how can you turn while 
                    having zero angular momentum? b) Why does a rotating platform 
                    demonstration often not work. c) Why does a simple demonstration 
                    not work? d) Why does almost exactly the same demonstration 
                    not work in the opposite way? 
                  The talk starts with various personal stories about non-holonomic 
                    constraints and their relation to locomotion --- that's bikes, 
                    skates, driving on ice and walking --- and then gets into 
                    the 4 rotation puzzles. 
                   
                    Bio: Andy Ruina got three degrees from Brown University in 
                    Engineering. He studied friction, fracture, collisions, bicycles 
                    and the mechanics of walking. His lab made the most energy 
                    stingy walking robot and also a robot that walked 14.3 miles 
                    without human contact or refueling. He spends his summers 
                    in on an island in SouthWest Finland near Stockholm where 
                    is wife studies wasps that lay eggs in baby butterflies. Google 
                    ruina. 
                   
                   
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                  Previous Seminars 
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                November 
                  25, 2010 
                  4:10 
                  MP 102 
                 | 
                Eitan 
                  Grinspun (Columbia University) 
                  From Sorcery to Science: how Hollywood Physics impacts the 
                  Sciences  
                  Cinema uses computers to animate physics. Special effects 
                    such as explosions and lifelike depictions of imaginary characters 
                    are made possible by mathematical and computational models 
                    that capture qualitative, characteristic behavior of a mechanical 
                    system. This is scientific computing with a twist. I will 
                    describe the process by which we derive and compute models 
                    of physics, and show actual examples of resulting technologies 
                    in film, consumer products, physics, and medicine. 
                  Our research group develops scientific computing tools by 
                    focusing on the underlying geometry of the mechanical system. 
                    I will describe a process in which we build a discrete picture 
                    from the ground up, mimicking the axioms, structures, and 
                    symmetries of the smooth setting. I will survey the problems 
                    we address using this methodology, such as computing the motion 
                    of flexible surfaces, cloth, hair, honey, and solids experiencing 
                    mechanical contact. Industry and academia has adopted these 
                    methods to improve products such as Adobe Photoshop, films 
                    such as Disney's Tangled (whose release date coincides with 
                    this talk), train surgeons, and understand nonlinear soft-matter 
                    phenomena. 
                   
                    BIO 
                  Eitan Grinspun is Associate Professor of Computer Science 
                    at Columbia University in the City of New York. He was Professeur 
                    d'Universite Invite at l'Universite Pierre et Marie Curie 
                    in 2009, a Research Scientist at the Courant Institute of 
                    Mathematical Sciences from 2003-2004, and a graduate student 
                    at the California Institute of Technology from 1997-2003. 
                    He was an NVIDIA Fellow in 2001, an Everhart Distinguished 
                    Lecturer in 2003, an NSF CAREER Award recipient in 2007, and 
                    is currently an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow. 
                   
                   
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                November 
                  24, 2010 
                  3:10pm 
                  Fields Institute, Room 230 | 
                Eitan 
                  Grinspun (Columbia University) 
                  Discrete Elastic Rods and Viscous Threads  
                  Many physical phenomena can explained by geometric principles 
                    that underly and govern them. For example, the fascinating 
                    curved shapes taken on by thin elastic rods (such as ropes, 
                    knots, or DNA strands), which can be physically explained 
                    by the nonlinear interaction between bending and twisting 
                    potentials, have a geometric interpretation in terms of moving 
                    adapted frames. The computation of these phenomena benefits 
                    from explicit attention to this geometric viewpoint. 
                  Computer-based simulations of solid rods and fluid threads 
                    necessarily rely on reducing the continuous description to 
                    a discrete (finite) one. Using notions of discrete framed 
                    curves and discrete parallel transport we develop a discrete 
                    geometric model of thin flexible rods with arbitrary cross 
                    section and undeformed configuration. Using Raleigh's analogy 
                    enables a time-discretized transition to a model of viscous 
                    fluid threads. The resulting computations of elastic rods 
                    and viscous threads are validated via comparison of buckling, 
                    stability, and coupled-mode numerical, analytical, and empirical 
                    experiments. 
                  This is joint work with Basile Audoly, Miklós Bergou, 
                    Etienne Vouga and Max Wardetzky. 
                  BIO 
                  Eitan Grinspun is Associate Professor of Computer Science 
                    at Columbia University in the City of New York. He was Professeur 
                    d'Universite Invite at l'Universite Pierre et Marie Curie 
                    in 2009, a Research Scientist at the Courant Institute of 
                    Mathematical Sciences from 2003-2004, and a graduate student 
                    at the California Institute of Technology from 1997-2003. 
                    He was an NVIDIA Fellow in 2001, an Everhart Distinguished 
                    Lecturer in 2003, an NSF CAREER Award recipient in 2007, and 
                    is currently an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow. 
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