Daniel Svenšek
University of Ljubljana
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel Svenšek.
European Physical Journal E | 2011
Helmut R. Brand; Harald Pleiner; Daniel Svenšek
We present the derivation of the macroscopic equations for systems with an axial dynamic preferred direction. In addition to the usual hydrodynamic variables, we introduce the time derivative of the local preferred direction as a new variable and discuss its macroscopic consequences including new cross-coupling terms. Such an approach is expected to be useful for a number of systems for which orientational degrees of freedom are important including, for example, the formation of dynamic macroscopic patterns shown by certain bacteria such a Proteus mirabilis. We point out similarities in symmetry between the additional macroscopic variable discussed here, and the magnetization density in magnetic systems as well as the so-called
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Tilen Potisk; Daniel Svenšek; Helmut R. Brand; Harald Pleiner; Darja Lisjak; Natan Osterman; Alenka Mertelj
European Physical Journal E | 2013
Harald Pleiner; Daniel Svenšek; Helmut R. Brand
\hat l
Physical Review E | 2008
Daniel Svenšek; Rudolf Podgornik
European Physical Journal E | 2014
Helmut R. Brand; Harald Pleiner; Daniel Svenšek
vector in superfluid 3He-A. Furthermore we investigate the coupling to a gel-like system for which one has the strain tensor and relative rotations between the new variable and the network as additional macroscopic variables.
Physical Review E | 2018
Tilen Potisk; Alenka Mertelj; Nerea Sebastian; Natan Osterman; Darja Lisjak; Helmut R. Brand; Harald Pleiner; Daniel Svenšek
Hydrodynamics of complex fluids with multiple order parameters is governed by a set of dynamic equations with many material constants, of which only some are easily measurable. We present a unique example of a dynamic magneto-optic coupling in a ferromagnetic nematic liquid, in which long-range orientational order of liquid crystalline molecules is accompanied by long-range magnetic order of magnetic nanoplatelets. We investigate the dynamics of the magneto-optic response experimentally and theoretically and find out that it is significantly affected by the dissipative dynamic cross-coupling between the nematic and magnetic order parameters. The cross-coupling coefficient determined by fitting the experimental results with a macroscopic theory is of the same order of magnitude as the dissipative coefficient (rotational viscosity) that governs the reorientation of pure liquid crystals.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016
Rudolf Podgornik; M. Alphan Aksoyoglu; Selcuk Yasar; Daniel Svenšek; V. Adrian Parsegian
Abstract.We study the dynamics of systems with a polar dynamic preferred direction. Examples include the pattern-forming growth of bacteria as well as shoals of fish, flocks of birds and migrating insects. Due to the fact that the preferred direction only exists dynamically, but not statically, the macroscopic variable of choice is the macroscopic velocity associated with the motion of the active units, which are typically biological in nature. We derive the macroscopic equations for such a system and discuss novel static, reversible and irreversible cross-couplings connected to a second velocity as a variable. We analyze in detail how the macroscopic behavior of an active system with a polar dynamic preferred direction compares to other systems with two velocities including immiscible liquids and electrically neutral quantum liquids such as superfluid 4He and 3He . We critically discuss changes in the normal mode spectrum when comparing uncharged superfluids, immiscible liquids and active system with a polar dynamic preferred direction. We investigate the influence of a macroscopic hand (collective effects of chirality) on the macroscopic behavior of such active media.Graphical abstract
EPL | 2012
Daniel Svenšek; Rudolf Podgornik
We investigate a longitudinally loaded elastic nanorod inside a cylindrical channel and show within the context of classical elasticity theory that the Euler buckling instability leads to a helical postbuckling form of the rod within the channel. The local pitch of the confined helix changes along the channel and so does the longitudinal force transmitted along the rod, diminishing away from the loaded end. This creates a possibility of jamming of the nanorod within the channel.
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2016
Rok Prislan; Gregor Veble; Daniel Svenšek
Abstract.The issue of dynamic contributions to the macroscopic stress tensor has been of high interest in the field of bio-inspired active systems over the last few years. Of particular interest is a direct coupling (“active term”) of the stress tensor with the order parameter, the latter describing orientational order induced by active processes. Here we analyze more generally possible reversible and irreversible dynamic contributions to the stress tensor for various passive and active macroscopic systems. This includes systems with tetrahedral/octupolar order, polar and non-polar (chiral) nematic and smectic liquid crystals, as well as active fluids with a dynamic preferred (polar or non-polar) direction. We show that it cannot a priori be seen, neither from the symmetry properties of the macroscopic variables involved, nor from the structure of the cross-coupling contributions to the stress tensor, whether the system studied is active or passive. Rather, that depends on whether the variables that give rise to those cross-couplings in the stress tensor are driven or not. We demonstrate that several simplified descriptions of active systems in the literature that neglect the necessary counter term to the active term violate linear irreversible thermodynamics and lead to an unphysical contribution to the entropy production.Graphical abstract
Physical Review E | 2004
Daniel Svenšek; Slobodan Zumer
We investigate dynamic magneto-optic effects in a ferromagnetic nematic liquid crystal experimentally and theoretically. Experimentally we measure the magnetization and the phase difference of the transmitted light when an external magnetic field is applied. As a model we study the coupled dynamics of the magnetization, M, and the director field, n, associated with the liquid crystalline orientational order. We demonstrate that the experimentally studied macroscopic dynamic behavior reveals the importance of a dynamic cross-coupling between M and n. The experimental data are used to extract the value of the dissipative cross-coupling coefficient. We also make concrete predictions about how reversible cross-coupling terms between the magnetization and the director could be detected experimentally by measurements of the transmitted light intensity as well as by analyzing the azimuthal angle of the magnetization and the director out of the plane spanned by the anchoring axis and the external magnetic field. We derive the eigenmodes of the coupled system and study their relaxation rates. We show that in the usual experimental setup used for measuring the relaxation rates of the splay-bend or twist-bend eigenmodes of a nematic liquid crystal one expects for a ferromagnetic nematic liquid crystal a mixture of at least two eigenmodes.