Skip to main content

Publications

Confirmation and variability of the Allee effect in Dictyostelium discoideum cell populations, possible role of chemical signaling within cell clusters

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
I. Segota
M.M. Edwards
A. Campello
B.H. Rappazzo
X. Wang
A. Strandburg-Peshkin
X.-Q. Zhou
A. Rachakonda
K. Daie
A. Lussenhop
S. Lee
K. Tharratt
A. Deshmukh
E.M. Sebesta
M. Zhang
S. Lau
S. Bennedsen
J. Ginsberg
T. Campbell
C. Wang
Carl Franck
Abstract

In studies of the unicellular eukaryote Dictyostelium discoideum, many have anecdotally observed that cell dilution below a certain 'threshold density' causes cells to undergo a period of slow growth (lag). However, little is documented about the slow growth phase and the reason for different growth dynamics below and above this threshold density. In this paper, we extend and correct our earlier work to report an extensive set of experiments, including the use of new cell counting technology, that set this slow-to-fast growth transition on a much firmer biological basis.

Journal
Physical Biology
Date Published
Funding Source
0552782
DMR-1719875
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Carl Franck Group

Heterophase Boundary for Active Hydrogen Evolution in MoTe2

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Y. Lee
N. Ling
D. Kim
M. Zhao
Y.A. Eshete
Eun-Ah Kim
S. Cho
H. Yang
Abstract

The phase engineering of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) is considered a promising strategy for promoting efficient catalysis, such as the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). While theoretical studies predict the presence of catalytically active atomic sites at heterophase boundaries in TMDs, conventional bulk HER measurements are not able to precisely explore these 1D heterophase regions for HER. Here, one reports on active HER occurring at heterophase boundaries between the semiconducting 2H and metallic 1T’ phases in large-scale MoTe2 grown via chemical vapor deposition.

Journal
Advanced Functional Materials
Date Published
Funding Source
2020R1A2C2003377
NRF‐2018M3D1A1058793
NRF‐2021M3H4A1A03054856
Group (Lab)

Mechanical regulation of early vertebrate embryogenesis

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M. Valet
E.D. Siggia
A.H. Brivanlou
Abstract

Embryonic cells grow in environments that provide a plethora of physical cues, including mechanical forces that shape the development of the entire embryo. Despite their prevalence, the role of these forces in embryonic development and their integration with chemical signals have been mostly neglected, and scrutiny in modern molecular embryology tilted, instead, towards the dissection of molecular pathways involved in cell fate determination and patterning.

Journal
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology
Date Published
Funding Source
2013131
LT000283-2020-C
Research Area

Megawatt pulses from an all-fiber and self-starting femtosecond oscillator

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
H. Haig
P. Sidorenko
R. Thorne
F. Wise
Abstract

Mamyshev oscillators produce high-performance pulses, but technical and practical issues render them unsuitable for widespread use. Here we present a Mamyshev oscillator with several key design features that enable self-starting operation and unprecedented performance and simplicity from an all-fiber laser. The laser generates 110 nJ pulses that compress to 40 fs and 80 nJ with a grating pair.

Journal
Optics Letters
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Robert Thorne Group

Structural origins of cartilage shear mechanics

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
T.W. Jackson
J. Michel
P. Lwin
L.A. Fortier
M. Das
L.J. Bonassar
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Articular cartilage is a remarkable material able to sustain millions of loading cycles over decades of use outperforming any synthetic substitute. Crucially, how extracellular matrix constituents alter mechanical performance, particularly in shear, remains poorly understood. Here, we present experiments and theory in support of a rigidity percolation framework that quantitatively describes the structural origins of cartilage's shear properties and how they arise from the mechanical interdependence of the collagen and aggrecan networks making up its extracellular matrix.

Journal
Science Advances
Date Published
Funding Source
BMMB-1536463
CBET-1604712
CMMI 1927197
DMR-1807602
DMR-1808026
DMR-1719875
R01AR071394
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Anisotropic Magnon Spin Transport in Ultrathin Spinel Ferrite Thin Films─Evidence for Anisotropy in Exchange Stiffness

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Ruofan Li
Peng Li
Di Yi
Lauren Riddiford
Yahong Chai
Yuri Suzuki
Daniel Ralph
Tianxiang Nan
Abstract

Magnon-mediated spin flow in magnetically ordered insulators enables long-distance spin-based information transport with low dissipation. In the materials studied to date, no anisotropy has been observed in the magnon propagation length as a function of propagation direction. Here, we report measurements of magnon spin transport in a spinel ferrite, magnesium aluminum ferrite MgAl0.5Fe1.5O4 (MAFO), which has a substantial in-plane 4-fold magnetic anisotropy.

Journal
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Date Published
Funding Source
NNCI-2025 233
N00014-15-1-0045
FA 9550-20-1-0293
DMR-1719 875
52 073 158,52 161 135 103

Rotating Bose gas dynamically entering the lowest Landau level

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
V. Sharma
E.J. Mueller
Abstract

Motivated by recent experiments, we model the dynamics of a condensed Bose gas in a rotating anisotropic trap, where the equations of motion are analogous to those of charged particles in a magnetic field. As the rotation rate is ramped from zero to the trapping frequency, the condensate stretches along one direction and is squeezed along another, becoming long and thin. When the trap anisotropy is slowly switched off on a particular timescale, the condensate is left in the lowest Landau level.

Journal
Physical Review A
Date Published
Funding Source
PHY-2110250

Interfacial charge transfer and persistent metallicity of ultrathin SrIrO3/SrRuO3 heterostructures

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
J.N. Nelson
N.J. Schreiber
A.B. Georgescu
B.H. Goodge
B.D. Faeth
C.T. Parzyck
Cyrus Zeledon
L.F. Kourkoutis
A.J. Millis
A. Georges
D.G. Schlom
K.M. Shen
Abstract

Interface quantum materials have yielded a plethora of previously unknown phenomena, including unconventional superconductivity, topological phases, and possible Majorana fermions. Typically, such states are detected at the interface between two insulating constituents by electrical transport, but whether either material is conducting, transport techniques become insensitive to interfacial properties.

Journal
Science Advances
Date Published
Funding Source
PHY-1549132
DMR-1709255
DMR-2039380
DMR-2104427
DGE-1650441
FA9550-15-1-0474
FA9550-21-1-0168
GBMF3850
GBMF9073
NNCI-2025233
DMR-1719875
NSF-MRI-1429155
Group (Lab)
Kyle Shen Group

Exotic invertible phases with higher-group symmetries

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Po-Shen Hsin
Wenjie Ji
Chao-Ming Jian
Abstract

We investigate a family of invertible phases of matter with higher-dimensional exotic excitations in even spacetime dimensions, which includes and generalizes the Kitaev’s chain in 1+1d. The excitation has Z2 higher-form symmetry that mixes with the spacetime Lorentz symmetry to form a higher group spacetime symmetry. We focus on the invertible exotic loop topological phase in 3+1d.

Journal
SciPost Physics
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1920434
DE-SC0011632
Group (Lab)
Chao-Ming Jian Group

Reproducibility in the fabrication and physics of moiré materials

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
C.N. Lau
M.W. Bockrath
K.F. Mak
F. Zhang
Abstract

Overlaying two atomic layers with a slight lattice mismatch or at a small rotation angle creates a moiré superlattice, which has properties that are markedly modified from (and at times entirely absent in) the ‘parent’ materials. Such moiré materials have progressed the study and engineering of strongly correlated phenomena and topological systems in reduced dimensions.

Journal
Nature
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR 2004801
DMR-2105028
DOE DE-SC0020187
FA9550-20-1-0219
DMR-1921581
DMR-1945351
DMR-2105139
W911NF-18-1-0416
Group (Lab)
Kin Fai Mak Group