News & EventsDepartment Events
Events
-
Jan6
EVENT DETAILS
Winter classes begin
TIME Monday, January 6, 2025
CONTACT Office of the Registrar nu-registrar@northwestern.edu EMAIL
CALENDAR University Academic Calendar
-
Jan14
EVENT DETAILS
Title: Science Is an All-You-Can-Eat Buffet and I Am Not Dieting
Speaker: Luis Amaral, Northwestern University
Abstract: In the old days, mathematicians were alchemists, astronomers, astrologers, chemists, demographers, philosophers, surveyors, and so many other things. Even as recently as 1944, Schrödinger could write about “how can the events in space and time which take place within the spatial boundary of a living organism be accounted for by physics and chemistry?" In modern times, it seems that if you do not stick with your discipline's scope then you are at risk of being dismissed as an interloper or a hack. But beauty can be found in many different areas of knowledge and rigor can be used to address phenomena from areas lacking rigorous abstractions. I will indulge in describing some examples from my lab’s recent research.
Zoom: https://northwestern.zoom.us/j/99845530059
-----
To subscribe to the Applied Mathematics Colloquia List send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.IT.NORTHWESTERN.EDU with the command:
add esam-seminar Youremail Firstname Lastname
TIME Tuesday, January 14, 2025 at 11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
LOCATION M416, Technological Institute map it
CONTACT Ted Shaeffer ted.shaeffer@northwestern.edu EMAIL
CALENDAR McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)
-
Feb4
EVENT DETAILS
Title: Walking Droplets & Galloping Bubbles
Speaker: Pedro Saenz, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Abstract: This talk explores two distinct problems in physics and engineering, blending experiments, simulations, and theory. The first part examines walking droplets, or "walkers," which self-propel across a vibrating fluid bath through a resonant interaction with their guiding wave field. These droplets exhibit behaviors typically associated with quantum particles, such as localized motion in disordered environments, which is akin to quantum Anderson localization. The study reveals that diffusion is suppressed when the guiding wave field interacts with random topographies, driven by a resonant coupling that creates an attractive wave potential, demonstrating how a classical particle can localize like a wave. The second part introduces a new mechanism where bubbles "gallop" along horizontal surfaces in a vertically vibrated fluid chamber, powered by interactions between their shape oscillations. These active bubbles can follow diverse trajectory patterns, including rectilinear, orbital, and run-and-tumble motions, which can be controlled by external forces. Through periodic deformations and inertial forces, these bubbles achieve self-propulsion without external direction. The study presents potential applications for galloping bubbles, including bubble manipulation, transport, sorting, navigation through complex fluid networks, and surface cleaning.
Zoom: https://northwestern.zoom.us/j/93833993196
-----
To subscribe to the Applied Mathematics Colloquia List send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.IT.NORTHWESTERN.EDU with the command:
add esam-seminar Youremail Firstname Lastname
TIME Tuesday, February 4, 2025 at 11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
LOCATION M416, Technological Institute map it
CONTACT Ted Shaeffer ted.shaeffer@northwestern.edu EMAIL
CALENDAR McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)
-
Feb25
EVENT DETAILS
Title: TBA
Speaker: Jim Stone, Institute for Advanced Study
Abstract: TBA
Zoom: TBA
-----
To subscribe to the Applied Mathematics Colloquia List send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.IT.NORTHWESTERN.EDU with the command:
add esam-seminar Youremail Firstname Lastname
TIME Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
LOCATION M416, Technological Institute map it
CONTACT Ted Shaeffer ted.shaeffer@northwestern.edu EMAIL
CALENDAR McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)
-
Mar11
EVENT DETAILS
Title: Active Particles in Inhomogeneous Environments
Speaker: Vaseem Shaik, Northwestern University
Abstract: Active particles are entities, either living (like microorganisms, birds, and humans) or non-living (like nanorobots), that convert stored energy into directed motion. A suspension of these particles is called active matter. They often navigate through inhomogeneous environments such as gradients in heat, light, nutrients, or fluid properties like viscosity and density, exhibiting directed motion known as taxis (e.g., chemotaxis, phototaxis, gravitaxis). This summary focuses on μm - mm-sized particles swimming in fluids with mechanical property gradients, like viscosity, elasticity, and density. It discusses phenomena like viscotaxis (response to viscosity gradients), behavior similar to light refraction in viscosity gradients (described by a Snell’s law), durotaxis (response to elasticity gradients), and densitaxis (response to density gradients), with implications for plankton migration. The study also covers particle-induced mixing and the influence of noise, exploring how these inhomogeneities can control active matter in confined environments.
Zoom: https://northwestern.zoom.us/j/96970714028
-----
To subscribe to the Applied Mathematics Colloquia List send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.IT.NORTHWESTERN.EDU with the command:
add esam-seminar Youremail Firstname Lastname
TIME Tuesday, March 11, 2025 at 11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
LOCATION M416, Technological Institute map it
CONTACT Ted Shaeffer ted.shaeffer@northwestern.edu EMAIL
CALENDAR McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)
-
Apr8
EVENT DETAILS
Title: TBA
Speaker: Brennan Sprinkle, Colorado School of Mines
Abstract: TBA
Zoom: TBA
-----
To subscribe to the Applied Mathematics Colloquia List send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.IT.NORTHWESTERN.EDU with the command:
add esam-seminar Youremail Firstname Lastname
TIME Tuesday, April 8, 2025 at 11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
LOCATION M416, Technological Institute map it
CONTACT Ted Shaeffer ted.shaeffer@northwestern.edu EMAIL
CALENDAR McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)