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"How liquid crystals handle conflicting boundary conditions"

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Blogger Uncle Al said...

Pyrex (7740 borosilicate glass) has 5.5+ Mohs hardness, hard as a stainless steel knife. Knoop hardness 418 kg/mm^2, Vickers hardness 5.8 GPA, about Rockwell C ~56. Wipe or swirl a Pyrex microscope slide surface with a soft cloth, paper towel, Chem-Wipe, tissue; or a block of teflon. Thin layer liquid crystal ordering an orientation can wildly vary, depending on the surface "preparation."

Psychology maze literature is often crap because animals lay down researcher-imperceptible scent trails. Planarians trained, cut up, regrown, then retested followed laid slime trails. Beware surface monolayers!

3:41 PM, December 06, 2012

Blogger Zephir said...

/*Up to 2nd order in derivatives of the vector field there is a handfull of terms that can be written down with constants to parameterize their relative strength.*/

This is merely a regression, i.e. the fitting curve to data, not explanation of curve with data. The causality arrow is still reversed here.

I still don't see any explanation of rectangular patterns or at least their simulation based on the formal model provided.

6:55 PM, December 06, 2012

Blogger Plato Hagel said...

Intuition and Logic in Mathematics by Henri Poincaré

On the other hand, look at Professor Klein: he is studying one of the most abstract questions of the theory of functions to determine whether on a given Riemann surface there always exists a function admitting of given singularities. What does the celebrated German geometer do? He replaces his Riemann surface by a metallic surface whose electric conductivity varies according to certain laws. He connects two of its points with the two poles of a battery. The current, says he, must pass, and the distribution of this current on the surface will define a function whose singularities will be precisely those called for by the enunciation.



Beware of spintronics and metal sheets Uncle:)

Because of the wavelike properties of matter at subatomic scales, this pattern could also be seen in the waveform that describes the location of an electron. Harvard physicist Eric Heller created this computer rendering and added color to make the pattern’s structure easier to see. See: What Is This? A Psychedelic Place Mat?

See Also: Quasicrystal: Prof. Dan Shechtman

2:06 PM, December 07, 2012

Blogger Plato Hagel said...

TEDxCaltech - David Awschalom - Spintronics: Abandoning Perfection for the Quantum Age"

Enjoy Uncle:)

3:00 PM, December 07, 2012

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