If you have a metal water can, what do you do ?…well make a geeky music video🙂
I played the water can to generate beats & recorded the response.
You will see the periodic beats + colour-coded audio-visualisation. 📹
Enjoy !
#fun #experiment
A metal water can was played to generate music beats, and the acoustic response was recorded. You will see the periodic beats in the timeline and a colour-coded audio-visualisation of it. Enjoy !
Wonderful Japanese-Gothic architecture at The University of Tokyo
I gave two talks in Tokyo.
First was on 24th April at Department of Applied Physics, Faculty of Advanced Engineering, Tokyo University of Science. My host was Prof. Yutaka Sumino. I spoke about “Soft Matter in Opto-Thermal Gradients“. I gave a short introduction to opto-thermal perturbations and potentials, and discussed some of our work on opto-thermophoretic trapping and Brownian dynamics. The audience contained a few master students too, and I really enjoyed discussing some concepts related to Brownian motion in an optothermal trap, and related experiments. Also, I had a very interesting discussion with Sumino and his students on their experiments on Janus particles.
with Yutaka
with Yutaka”s group
The second talk was on 25th April at Department of Physics, University of Tokyo. My host was Prof. Kazumasa Takeuchi. I spoke about “Soft Matter in Opto-Thermal Gradients : Evolutionary Dynamics and Pattern Formation“.
This talk was also announced on Japan’s statphys mailing list, and also live-casted over zoom. I discussed about the origins of optothermal effects in a laser trap, and how it can lead to some interesting dynamics and pattern formation in soft-matter system. Specifically, I highlighted the concept of Hot Brownian motion, and how it can be influenced using thermo-plasmons. The talk and discussion went on for almost 2 hours, and I really loved it. Also, Takeuchi and his students gave an overview of their work including a live demonstration on turbulence in liquid crystals, and it was fantastic.
I am always amazed to see fractal-like patterns….this one at a geographical scale…captured somewhere over south India..
I took the photo on my trip back to Pune from IIT Madras…
Thanks to IIT-M physics department for their invitation for colloquium…
Special thanks to Basudev Roy and Nirmala for hosting…. greatly enjoyed the discussion with many faculties and students..
In my talk, I mainly spoke on topics at the interface of statistical optics, Brownian motion and pattern formation.. Was delighted to see (and meet) Profs. Balki, Suresh Govindarajan Sunil Kumar Arnab Pal and many more in the audience.
The photo, retrospectively, captures the essence of the science discussed…