The IUTAM Symposium on Motile Cells in Complex Environments (MCCE2018) will bring together experts in the complementary fields of physics, applied mathematics, chemistry, biology, life sciences, and engineering to discuss multidisciplinary theoretical, numerical and experimental approaches to predict the behaviour of active complex fluid systems characterized by the presence of motile living cells. Cell motility is a multi-faceted interdisciplinary challenge for a wide community of scientists, with applications ranging from medical to bio-technological and environmental issues. Cells often grow and move within complex fluid environments: Examples include motile phytoplankton cells giving rise to bio-convective patterns in turbulent flows, but also suspensions of swimming bacteria that can form biofilms under adverse conditions and swarm to colonize solid surfaces. Depending on the targeted biological system, such environments may be characterized both by high and low Reynolds numbers, thus, involving a broad spectrum of spatial and temporal dynamics that are not easy to model.
Topics: The Symposium spans a wide selection of topics in biological fluid mechanics from single swimmer propulsion and navigation mechanisms to synchronized and collective motion, focusing on how active cells may use hydrodynamic interaction as well as biochemistry to coordinate their locomotion. Topics of interest are also the dynamics and rheology of active fluids, fluid-structure interactions in bio-inspired systems, growth of tissues, and surface colonization. The interest on these topics has exploded in recent years, as demonstrated by the wealth of experimental or numerical results that have been produced and by the many resulting (and sometimes competing) theories that have been developed.
05月14日
2018
05月18日
2018
注册截止日期
留言