PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Physicists create new kind of pasta to explain mysterious, ring-shaped polymers

Physicists create new kind of pasta to explain mysterious, ring-shaped polymers
2014-12-01
(Press-News.org) Two physicists from the University of Warwick have taken to the kitchen to explain the complexity surrounding what they say is one of the last big mysteries in polymer physics.

As a way of demonstrating the complicated shapes that ring-shaped polymers can adopt, the researchers have created a brand new type of ring-shaped pasta, dubbed "anelloni" (anello being the Italian word for "ring"), which they've exclusively unveiled in this month's Physics World.

With just 2 eggs and 200 g of plain flour, Davide Michieletto and Matthew S Turner have created large loops of pasta that, when cooked and thrown together in a bowl, get hugely tangled up, in much the same way that ring-shaped polymers become massively intertwined with each other.

A video of Davide Michieletto showing what it's like to eat this new kind of pasta was taken at the headquarters of Physics World and can be viewed here.

Whereas it's easy when faced with a bowl of normal spaghetti to suck or pull a single strand out, it's much harder to extract a single piece of pasta from a pile of anelloni, which get horribly tangled up.

"The thing about ring-shaped polymers...is that they're very poorly understood - in fact, they're one of the last big mysteries in polymer physics," the researchers write.

While the new kind of pasta is just a bit of fun, Michieletto and Turner's real work involves carrying out computer simulations of ring-shaped polymers, which have shown that if molecules are long enough, they are likely to get so tangled up that that they would appear frozen in place.

If this were true in real life - and there is some evidence to suggest that it is - then they believe they would have discovered a new state of matter, which they have called a "topological glass".

An ordinary glassy material is fashioned when a viscous liquid is cooled far enough that the molecules eventually stop moving and are frozen in place - they maintain the disordered structure of a liquid but develop the mechanical properties of a solid.

Plastic bottles, for example, are glassy materials that are set into shape when ordinary polymers - the building blocks of plastics - are rapidly cooled.

For a "topological glass" made from ring-shaped polymers, the motion of the individual molecules would slow down not just with temperature but also ring length, which Michieletto and Turner believe could inspire novel materials with applications that we cannot yet imagine.

"What would be nice about a topological glass is that its properties would be governed purely by topology, rather than the system-specific chemical details that often control when and how classical glasses form. Physicists love that kind of universal behaviour - in fact, obtaining a universal description of glasses has been a central goal in condensed-matter physics for several decades," they write.

While Michieletto and Turner wait for news on whether they've been granted more supercomputer time to push their simulations to the limit and learn more about these mysterious ring-shaped polymers, they can sit back and pass the time by picking apart a bowl of delicious, home-cooked anelloni.

"[W]hen it comes to eating pasta, the Italians were right all along - you're better off sticking to spaghetti, which you can eat nice and quickly. Make yourself a bowl of anelloni and it's likely to have gone cold by the time you've pulled all the rings apart and struggled your way to the messy end," they conclude.

INFORMATION:

Also in this issue: Pyramid puzzle - using muons to find ancient hidden chambers
Early-career test - the challenges of setting up your own physics lab
Christmas books - seeing the unseen, soundscapes and social physics

Please mention Physics World as the source of these items and, if publishing online, please include a hyperlink to: http://physicsworld.com

Notes for editors:

1. Physics World is the international monthly magazine published by the Institute of Physics. For further information or details of its editorial programme, please contact the editor, Dr Matin Durrani, tel +44 (0)117 930 1002. The magazine's website physicsworld.com is updated regularly and contains daily physics news and regular audio and video content. Visit http://physicsworld.com.

2. For copies of the articles reviewed here contact Mike Bishop, IOP Publishing Senior Press Officer, tel: +44 (0)11 7930 1032, e-mail: michael.bishop@iop.org

3. The Institute of Physics is a leading scientific society. We are a charitable organisation with a worldwide membership of more than 50,000, working together to advance physics education, research and application.

We engage with policymakers and the general public to develop awareness and understanding of the value of physics and, through IOP Publishing, we are world leaders in professional scientific communications.

In September 2013 we launched our first fundraising campaign. Our campaign, Opportunity Physics, offers you the chance to support the work that we do.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Physicists create new kind of pasta to explain mysterious, ring-shaped polymers

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

MD Anderson researcher receives top Italian science award

MD Anderson researcher receives top Italian science award
2014-12-01
Peter Friedl, M.D., Ph.D., professor of genitourinary medical oncology at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, has received one of Italy's top scientific awards for his work in imaging and cancer growth, metastasis and therapy response. Friedl was named a recipient of the 13th annual City of Florence Prize in Molecular Sciences. Previous recipients include such scientific luminaries as AIDS research pioneer Robert C. Gallo. M.D., human genome sequencing expert J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., and Nobel laureates Robert Hubert, Ph.D. and Ada Yonath, Ph.D. Friedl received ...

Natural 'high' could avoid chronic marijuana use

2014-12-01
Replenishing the supply of a molecule that normally activates cannabinoid receptors in the brain could relieve mood and anxiety disorders and enable some people to quit using marijuana, a Vanderbilt University study suggests. Cannabinoid receptors are normally activated by compounds in the brain called endocannabinoids, the most abundant of which is 2-AG. They also are "turned on" by the active ingredient in marijuana. Sachin Patel, M.D., Ph.D., and his colleagues developed a genetically modified mouse with impaired ability to produce 2-AG in the brain. The mice exhibited ...

Researchers develop a magnetic levitating gear

Researchers develop a magnetic levitating gear
2014-12-01
This research is being carried out under the auspices of MAGDRIVE, a European research project coordinated by Professor José Luis Pérez Díaz, from the UC3M Instituto Pedro San Juan de Lastanosa, in which seven European entities participate. It consists of the development of a magnetic gear reducer, that is, a mechanism that transforms speed from an input axle to another in an output axle (as in a bicycle chain mechanism or the gearbox of an automobile). But in this case, unlike a conventional gear reducer, this transmission is produced without contact between ...

Ground-based detection of super-Earth transit achieved

2014-12-01
Astronomers have measured the passing of a super-Earth in front of a bright, nearby Sun-like star using a ground-based telescope for the first time. The transit of the exoplanet 55 Cancri e is the shallowest detected from the ground yet. Since detecting a transit is the first step in analyzing a planet's atmosphere, this success bodes well for characterizing the many small planets that upcoming space missions are expected to discover in the next few years. The international research team used the 2.5-meter Nordic Optical Telescope on the island of La Palma, Spain, a moderate-sized ...

Researchers explore 3-D microsurgical anatomy of brainstem

2014-12-01
December 1, 2014 - A study using intricate fiber dissection techniques provides new insights into the deep anatomy of the human brainstem--and helps to define "safe entry zones" for neurosurgeons performing brainstem surgery, according to a special article published in Operative Neurosurgery, a quarterly supplement to Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. These publications are published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health. Neurosurgeons Dr. Kaan Yagmurlu and Dr. Albert L. Rhoton, Jr, of University of Florida, ...

Understanding the brain's 'suffocation alarm'

2014-12-01
Philadelphia, PA, December 1, 2014 - Panic disorder is a severe form of anxiety in which the affected individual feels an abrupt onset of fear, often accompanied by profound physical symptoms of discomfort. Scientists have known from studying twins that genes contribute to the risk of panic disorder, but very little is known about which specific genes are involved. Two of the most common and terrifying symptoms of this severe anxiety are a sense of shortness of breath and feelings of suffocation. Studies have shown that breathing air that has increased levels of carbon ...

Love at first smell

2014-12-01
Mate choice is often the most important decision in the lives of humans and animals. Scientists at the Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology at the Vetmeduni Vienna have found the first evidence that birds may choose their mate through odor. They published their findings in Nature's Scientific Reports. It has long been understood that reproducing with close relatives may have profoundly negative effects on offspring. It is therefore not surprising that biologists have discovered in some species that breeding individuals have evolved ways to detect their genetic similarity ...

Researchers design a model to predict the effects of chemical substances on health

Researchers design a model to predict the effects  of chemical substances on health
2014-12-01
Current data bases hold information on thousands of molecules--including drugs, natural substances, and chemical agents found in the environment-- that are associated with diseases, either because they have adverse effects or exert a therapeutic action. Using this information, gathered over many years and available in data bases, scientists headed by ICREA researcher Patrick Aloy at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) have devised a predictive model that allows them to associate chemical fragments with positive or negative effects in 20% of human ...

UGA study finds it's mean boys, not mean girls, who rule at school

UGA study finds its mean boys, not mean girls, who rule at school
2014-12-01
Athens, Ga. - Debunking the myth of the "mean girl," new research from the University of Georgia has found that boys use relational aggression--malicious rumors, social exclusion and rejection--to harm or manipulate others more often than girls. The longitudinal study, published online in the journal Aggressive Behavior, followed a cohort of students from middle to high school and found that, at every grade level, boys engaged in relationally aggressive behavior more often than girls. A team led by UGA professor Pamela Orpinas analyzed data collected from 620 students ...

WHACK! Study measures head blows in girls' lacrosse

WHACK! Study measures head blows in girls lacrosse
2014-12-01
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- Lacrosse players swing hard, which is why errant stick blows are the leading cause of concussion in girls' and women's lacrosse. In a new study, researchers measured how much the worst blows accelerate the head and how much different kinds of headgear could reduce those accelerations. Girls' and women's lacrosse is a different game from the version played by males, said Joseph Crisco, the Henry Frederick Lippitt Professor of Orthopaedic Research in the Alpert Medical School of Brown University and a researcher at Rhode Island Hospital. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Stronger stress response in monkeys helps them survive

Using infrared heat transfer to modify chemical reactions

Being a ladies' man comes at a price for alpha male baboons

Study shows anti-clotting drug reduced bleeding events in patients with atrial fibrillation

UMaine-led team develops more holistic way to monitor lobster industry

Antiviral protein causes genetic changes implicated in Huntington’s disease progression

SwRI-led PUNCH spacecraft make final pit stop before launch

Claims for the world’s deepest earthquake challenged by new analysis

MSU study finds children of color experience more variability in sleep times

Pregnancy may increase risk of mental illness in people with MS

Multiple sclerosis linked to higher risk of mental illness during and after pregnancy

Beyond ChatGPT: WVU researchers to study use and ethics of artificial intelligence across disciplines

Ultrasensitive test detects, serially monitors intact virus levels in patients with COVID-19

mRNA-activated blood clots could cushion the blow of osteoarthritis

Three rockets will ignite Poker Flat’s 2025 launch season

Jared M. Kutzin, DNP, MS, MPH, RN, named President of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare

PET probe images inflammation with high sensitivity and selectivity

Epilepsy patient samples offer unprecedented insights on brain ‘brakes’ linked to disorders

Your stroke risk might be higher if your parents divorced during your childhood

Life satisfaction measurement tool provides robust information across nations, genders, ages, languages

Adult children of divorced parents at higher risk of stroke

Anti-climate action groups tend to arise in countries with stronger climate change efforts

Some coral "walk" towards blue or white light, using rolling, sliding or pulsing movements to migrate, per experiments with free-living mushroom coral Cycloseris cyclolites

Discovery of the significance of birth in the maintenance of quiescent neural stem cells

Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the US

Bioluminescent cell imaging gets a glow-up

Float like a jellyfish: New coral mobility mechanisms uncovered

Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the U.S.

Who to vaccinate first? Penn engineers answer a life-or-death question with network theory

Research shows PTSD, anxiety may affect reproductive health of women firefighters

[Press-News.org] Physicists create new kind of pasta to explain mysterious, ring-shaped polymers