forthcoming SISSA MathLab seminars
Emanuele Tuillier Illingworth
tuillier at sissa.it
Mon Oct 26 08:50:42 CET 2015
MATHLAB SEMINARS ANNOUNCEMENT
Date:
Wednesday, 28 October, 2015 - 14:30
*Speaker: *Giancarlo Cicconofri (SISSA - International School for
Advanced Studies)
*Room:* SISSA - Santorio A - room 133
*Abstract: *
I will present some recent results on the analysis of two swimmer models
(one actuated externally and the other internally). These models provide
an example of propulsion at low Reynolds number resulting from the
periodical beating of a passive elastic filament. Motions produced by
generic periodic actuations are studied within the regime of small
compliance of the filament. The analysis shows that variations in the
velocity of beating can generate different swimming trajectories. Motion
control through modulations of the actuation velocity will be discussed.
Date:
Thursday, 29 October, 2015 - 16:00
*Speaker: *Massimiliano Rossi (University of Munich, Institute of Fluid
Mechanics and Aerodynamics)
*Room:* SISSA - Santorio A - room 133
*Abstract: *
Measuring the velocity of fluids confined in microscopic devices is a
challenging task. The small dimensions involved prevent the use of
conventional probes such as hot wire anemometers or pitot tubes. A
microscopic adaptation of the particle-image-velocimetry (PIV)
technique, namely micro-PIV, has been for the past decades the
gold-standard in this domain. The limitations of micro-PIV are mainly
two: It gives a two-dimensional measurement of the velocity field, and
it suffers for errors in the depth direction in case of large velocity
gradients. A way to overcome these problems is to use
3D-particle-tracking methods. However, a major constraint in this case
is that multi-camera approaches are often not possible and only one
optical access, usually through a microscope objective, is allowed. In
this talk, the basics of micro-PIV and the recent advancements in
3D-particle-tracking methods for micro-flows based on defocusing will be
presented and discussed. Furthermore, a couple of applications will be
shown in which the astigmatic-particle-tracking-velocimetry (APTV)
technique was used to measure complex three-dimensional flows in
microfluidic devices with sub-micrometric resolution.
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