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Udo Seifert

Bio: Udo Seifert is an academic researcher from University of Stuttgart. The author has contributed to research in topics: Entropy production & Fluctuation theorem. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 308 publications receiving 22363 citations. Previous affiliations of Udo Seifert include Forschungszentrum Jülich & Technische Universität München.


Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the critical behavior arising from thermally-excited shape fluctuations is determined both for global quantities such as the mean separation of these surfaces and for local quantities, such as probabilities for local contacts.
Abstract: Wetting phenomena, molecular protrusions of lipid bilayers and membrane stacks under lateral tension provide physical examples for interacting surfaces with tension. Such surfaces are studied theoretically using functional renormalization and Monte-Carlo simulations. The critical behavior arising from thermally-excited shape fluctuations is determined both for global quantities such as the mean separation of these surfaces and for local quantities such as the probabilities for local contacts.

13 citations

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TL;DR: Stochastic thermodynamics of systems that are described by a time-dependent density field, for example, simple liquids and colloidal suspensions, is discussed and it is shown that the Jarzynski relation connecting work with the change of free energy holds if the time evolution of the density follows the Kawasaki-Dean equation.
Abstract: We discuss the stochastic thermodynamics of systems that are described by a time-dependent density field, for example simple liquids and colloidal suspensions. For a time-dependent change of external parameters, we show that the Jarzynski relation connecting work with the change of free energy holds if the time evolution of the density follows the Kawasaki-Dean equation. Specifically, we study the work distributions for the compression and expansion of a two-dimensional colloidal model suspension implementing a practical coarse-graining scheme of the microscopic particle positions. We demonstrate that even if coarse-grained dynamics and density functional do not match, the fluctuation relations for the work still hold albeit for a different, apparent, change of free energy.

13 citations

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TL;DR: The nonequilibrium forces mediated by the depletants on the two colloidal particles within a dynamical superposition approximation (DSA) scheme are calculated and the colloidal microstructure around the driven probe is obtained.
Abstract: Entropic depletion forces arise between mesoscopic bodies that are immersed in a suspension of macromolecules, such as colloid-polymer mixtures. Here we consider the case of a driven colloidal probe in the presence of another, passive colloidal particle, both solvated in an ideal bath of small spherical particles. We calculate the nonequilibrium forces mediated by the depletants on the two colloidal particles within a dynamical superposition approximation (DSA) scheme. In order to assess the quality of this approximation, and to obtain the colloidal microstructure around the driven probe, we corroborate our theoretical results with Brownian dynamics simulations.

13 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider two-dimensional triangular networks of beads connected by Hookean tethers under isotropic compression and determine both the compression and the shear modulus as a function of temperature and compression within simple approximations and by a Monte Carlo simulation.
Abstract: We consider two-dimensional triangular networks of beads connected by Hookean tethers under isotropic compression. We determine both the compression and the shear modulus as a function of temperature and compression within simple approximations and by a Monte Carlo simulation. At low temperature, this network undergoes a collapse transition with increasing compression. In the two phase region, collapsed and non-collapsed triangles coexist. While the compression modulus vanishes in the two phase region, the shear modulus shows only a small anomaly at the transition. With increasing temperature, this transition disappears in our simulation. Anharmonic shear fluctuations invalidate a harmonic analysis in large regions of the phase space. In application to the red blood cell membrane, we obtain good agreement with more microscopic models for the shear modulus. Our results also indicate that strong compression will lead to non-trivial elastic behavior of the cell membrane.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Udo Seifert1
TL;DR: The shape and dynamics of vesicles are governed by the competition between curvature energy, geometrical constraints and viscous dissipation in the surrounding liquid as discussed by the authors, which can be explained theoretically using the concept of marginal stability.
Abstract: The shapes and dynamics of vesicles are governed by the competition between curvature energy, geometrical constraints and viscous dissipation in the surrounding liquid. Recent progress in this field has occurred in three major areas. Firstly, detailed comparisons between theory and experiment have been performed for various shape transformations such as the budding transition, conformai diffusion of vesicles of higher genus, and starfish vesicles. Secondly, the novel experimental technique of using laser tweezers to excite membranes locally has revealed non-equilibrium properties, such as pearling of cylindrical vesicles, which can be explained theoretically using the concept of marginal stability. Thirdly, the quantitative study of shape fluctuation of adhering vesicles motivated a theoretical investigation which includes self-consistent shape-dependent steric repulsion.

12 citations


Cited by
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28 Jul 2005
TL;DR: PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、树突状组胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作�ly.
Abstract: 抗原变异可使得多种致病微生物易于逃避宿主免疫应答。表达在感染红细胞表面的恶性疟原虫红细胞表面蛋白1(PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、内皮细胞、树突状细胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作用。每个单倍体基因组var基因家族编码约60种成员,通过启动转录不同的var基因变异体为抗原变异提供了分子基础。

18,940 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report, extend, and interpret much of our current understanding relating to theories of noise-activated escape, for which many of the notable contributions are originating from the communities both of physics and of physical chemistry.
Abstract: The calculation of rate coefficients is a discipline of nonlinear science of importance to much of physics, chemistry, engineering, and biology. Fifty years after Kramers' seminal paper on thermally activated barrier crossing, the authors report, extend, and interpret much of our current understanding relating to theories of noise-activated escape, for which many of the notable contributions are originating from the communities both of physics and of physical chemistry. Theoretical as well as numerical approaches are discussed for single- and many-dimensional metastable systems (including fields) in gases and condensed phases. The role of many-dimensional transition-state theory is contrasted with Kramers' reaction-rate theory for moderate-to-strong friction; the authors emphasize the physical situation and the close connection between unimolecular rate theory and Kramers' work for weakly damped systems. The rate theory accounting for memory friction is presented, together with a unifying theoretical approach which covers the whole regime of weak-to-moderate-to-strong friction on the same basis (turnover theory). The peculiarities of noise-activated escape in a variety of physically different metastable potential configurations is elucidated in terms of the mean-first-passage-time technique. Moreover, the role and the complexity of escape in driven systems exhibiting possibly multiple, metastable stationary nonequilibrium states is identified. At lower temperatures, quantum tunneling effects start to dominate the rate mechanism. The early quantum approaches as well as the latest quantum versions of Kramers' theory are discussed, thereby providing a description of dissipative escape events at all temperatures. In addition, an attempt is made to discuss prominent experimental work as it relates to Kramers' reaction-rate theory and to indicate the most important areas for future research in theory and experiment.

5,180 citations

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TL;DR: Van Kampen as mentioned in this paper provides an extensive graduate-level introduction which is clear, cautious, interesting and readable, and could be expected to become an essential part of the library of every physical scientist concerned with problems involving fluctuations and stochastic processes.
Abstract: N G van Kampen 1981 Amsterdam: North-Holland xiv + 419 pp price Dfl 180 This is a book which, at a lower price, could be expected to become an essential part of the library of every physical scientist concerned with problems involving fluctuations and stochastic processes, as well as those who just enjoy a beautifully written book. It provides an extensive graduate-level introduction which is clear, cautious, interesting and readable.

3,647 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the rules of the ring, the ring population, and the need to get off the ring in order to measure the movement of a cyclic clock.
Abstract: 1980 Preface * 1999 Preface * 1999 Acknowledgements * Introduction * 1 Circular Logic * 2 Phase Singularities (Screwy Results of Circular Logic) * 3 The Rules of the Ring * 4 Ring Populations * 5 Getting Off the Ring * 6 Attracting Cycles and Isochrons * 7 Measuring the Trajectories of a Circadian Clock * 8 Populations of Attractor Cycle Oscillators * 9 Excitable Kinetics and Excitable Media * 10 The Varieties of Phaseless Experience: In Which the Geometrical Orderliness of Rhythmic Organization Breaks Down in Diverse Ways * 11 The Firefly Machine 12 Energy Metabolism in Cells * 13 The Malonic Acid Reagent ('Sodium Geometrate') * 14 Electrical Rhythmicity and Excitability in Cell Membranes * 15 The Aggregation of Slime Mold Amoebae * 16 Numerical Organizing Centers * 17 Electrical Singular Filaments in the Heart Wall * 18 Pattern Formation in the Fungi * 19 Circadian Rhythms in General * 20 The Circadian Clocks of Insect Eclosion * 21 The Flower of Kalanchoe * 22 The Cell Mitotic Cycle * 23 The Female Cycle * References * Index of Names * Index of Subjects

3,424 citations