Noriko Oikawa
Kyushu University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Noriko Oikawa.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Edith Schäfer; Marco Tarantola; Elena Polo; Christian Westendorf; Noriko Oikawa; Eberhard Bodenschatz; Burkhard Geil; Andreas Janshoff
Chemotactic responses of Dictyostelium discoideum cells to periodic self-generated signals of extracellular cAMP comprise a large number of intricate morphological changes on different length scales. Here, we scrutinized chemotaxis of single Dictyostelium discoideum cells under conditions of starvation using a variety of optical, electrical and acoustic methods. Amebas were seeded on gold electrodes displaying impedance oscillations that were simultaneously analyzed by optical video microscopy to relate synchronous changes in cell density, morphology, and distance from the surface to the transient impedance signal. We found that starved amebas periodically reduce their overall distance from the surface producing a larger impedance and higher total fluorescence intensity in total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. Therefore, we propose that the dominant sources of the observed impedance oscillations observed on electric cell-substrate impedance sensing electrodes are periodic changes of the overall cell-substrate distance of a cell. These synchronous changes of the cell-electrode distance were also observed in the oscillating signal of acoustic resonators covered with amebas. We also found that periodic cell-cell aggregation into transient clusters correlates with changes in the cell-substrate distance and might also contribute to the impedance signal. It turned out that cell-cell contacts as well as cell-substrate contacts form synchronously during chemotaxis of Dictyostelium discoideum cells.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Kazuya Kobayashi; Noriko Oikawa; Rei Kurita
We experimentally study heat transport in a gelatin solution near a reversible sol-gel transition point where viscosity strongly depends on temperature. We visualize the temperature field and velocity field using thermochromic liquid crystals and polystyrene latex particles, respectively. During the initial stages of heating, we find that heat transport undergoes a dynamical transition from conductive to convective. Subsequently, during later stages, we observe that the transport dynamics are much more complex than conventional thermal convections. At the sample’s surface we observe the formation of stagnant domains, which lack fluid flow. Their formation is not due to the effects of local cooling. We determine that it is the dynamics of these stagnant domains that induce convective-conductive-convective transitions.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Noriko Oikawa; Rei Kurita
Patterns are often formed when particles cluster: Since patterns reflect the connectivity of different types of material, the emergence of patterns affects the physical and chemical properties of systems and shares a close relationship to their macroscopic functions. A radial dendritic pattern (RDP) is observed in many systems such as snow crystals, polymer crystals and biological systems. Although most of these systems are considered as dense particle suspensions, the mechanism of RDP formation in dense particle systems is not yet understood. It should be noted that the diffusion limited aggregation model is not applicable to RDP formation in dense systems, but in dilute particle systems. Here, we propose a simple model that exhibits RDP formation in a dense particle system. The model potential for the inter-particle interaction is composed of two parts, a repulsive and an attractive force. The repulsive force is applied to all the particles all the time and the attractive force is exerted only among particles inside a circular domain, which expands at a certain speed as a wave front propagating from a preselected centre. It is found that an RDP is formed if the velocity of the wave front that triggers the attractive interaction is of the same order of magnitude as the time scale defined by the aggregation speed.
Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2016
Kazuya Kobayashi; Noriko Oikawa; Rei Kurita
Recent work has shown that the primary mode for heat transport in a gelatin solution oscillates between convection and conduction. This dynamical change is induced by stagnant domain formation wher...
Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2004
Noriko Oikawa; Yoshiki Hidaka; Shoichi Kai
The transition to turbulence in an electroconvective system of nematics separated by domain walls of the in-plane director is studied by observing the temporal change in image intensity. The measured time series are analyzed by the sonogram method. In the system where the domain structure is formed by abnormal roll instability, defect chaos appears as intermittent periodic oscillation limited by the domain walls. By increasing applied voltage, a periodic defect lattice appears. In the higher voltage region, the defect lattice collapses and changes into local turbulent states. The spatiotemporal intermittency is observed through these local turbulent domain motions.
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 2003
Tomoyuki Ohya; Noriko Oikawa; Ryuzou Kawabata; Hirotaka Okabe; Shoichi Kai
In order to evaluate the physiological damage to plants caused by osmotic stress, we have investigated the relationship between the inhibition of root elongation and spontaneous photon emission from the root. Adzuki bean roots were soaked in polyethylene glycol (PEG) solutions for short periods in their early growth stage, and their root length and photon emission were measured afterwards. Consequently, it became clear that the root elongation decreased with the increase of PEG concentration. Moreover, there was a clear correlation between the emission intensity of the cell division area in the root and the inhibition of elongation, though the elongation of individual roots varied to some degree.
Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2001
Satoshi Kawaguchi; Masayasu Mimura; Tomoyuki Ohya; Noriko Oikawa; Hirotaka Okabe; Shoichi Kai
An ecologically relevant pattern formation process mediated by hormonal interactions among growing seedlings is modeled based on the experimental observations on the effects of indole acetic acid, which can act as an inhibitor and activator of root growth depending on its concentration. In the absence of any lateral root with constant hormone-sensitivity, the edge effect phenomenon is obtained depending on the secretion rate of hormone from the main root. Introduction of growth-stage-dependent hormone-sensitivity drastically amplifies the initial randomness, resulting in spatially irregular macroscopic patterns. When the lateral root growth is introduced, periodic patterns are obtained whose periodicity depends on the length of lateral roots. The growth-stage-dependent hormone-sensitivity and the lateral root growth are crucial for macroscopic periodic-pattern formation.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Yujiro Furuta; Noriko Oikawa; Rei Kurita
Liquid foams are classified into a dry foam and a wet foam, empirically judging from the liquid fraction or the shape of the gas bubbles. It is known that physical properties such as elasticity and diffusion are different between the dry foam and the wet foam. Nevertheless, definitions of those states have been vague and the dry-wet transition of foams has not been clarified yet. Here we show that the dry-wet transition is closely related to rearrangement of the gas bubbles, by simultaneously analysing the shape change of the bubbles and that of the entire foam in two dimensional foam. In addition, we also find a new state in quite low liquid fraction, which is named “superdry foam”. Whereas the shape change of the bubbles strongly depends on the change of the liquid fraction in the superdry foam, the shape of the bubbles does not change with changing the liquid fraction in the dry foam. Our results elucidate the relationship between the transitions and the macroscopic mechanical properties.
Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2016
Noriko Oikawa; Daiki Tahara; Rei Kurita
In contrast to the usual diffusive mixing process between two miscible liquids, the ionic liquid [Cnmim][PF6] forms a droplet in water while mixing. The droplet retains a sharp interface with surfa...
Physical Review E | 2015
Yoshiki Hidaka; Megumi Hashiguchi; Noriko Oikawa; Shoichi Kai
Two types of spatiotemporal chaos in the electroconvection of nematic liquid crystals, such as defect turbulence and spatiotemporal intermittency, have been statistically investigated according to the Lagrangian picture. Here fluctuations are traced using the motion of a single particle driven by chaotic convection. In the defect turbulence (fluctuating normal rolls), a particle is mainly trapped in a roll but sometimes jumps to a neighboring roll. Its activation energy is then obtained from the jumping (hopping) rate. This research clarifies that diffusion in the defect turbulence regime in electroconvection can be regarded as a kind of hopping process. The spatiotemporal intermittency appears as a coexistent state of ordered grid domains and turbulent domains. The motion of a single particle shows weak and strong diffusion, respectively, in the ordered and turbulent domains. The diffusion characteristics intermittently change from one to another with certain durations as the domains change. This research has found that the distribution function of the duration that a particle remains in an ordered area has a power-law decay for which the index is different from that obtained by the Eulerian measurement.