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Interdisciplinary Research Group on Complex Systems

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Title: Interdisciplinary Research Group on Complex Systems


1
Interdisciplinary Research Group onComplex
Systems
  • Indian Institute of Technology Madras,
  • Chennai , India.

http//www.iitm.ac.in
2
Broad Areas of Investigation
http//www.physics.iitm.ac.in/labs/dynamical http
//www.physics.iitm.ac.in/labs/cfl http//www.che
.iitm.ac.in/hpel
  • Complex Fluids
  • Complex Networks
  • Dynamical Systems
  • Quantum Computing and Information
  • Also,
  • Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive studies
  • (Dept. of Comp. Sci.)
  • Management Studies (Dept. of Mgmt. Stud.)

3
Complex Fluids Background
  • Complex media ranging from gels, suspensions to
    composite solids are the basis of much of
    state-of-the-art technology.
  • Dynamical response is characterized in terms of
    generalized susceptibilities.
  • Tools from equilibrium and non-equilibrium
    statistical mechanics, stochastic techniques.
  • Technical problems randomness arising from
    disorder, inhomogeneity and anisotropy, multiple
    length scales and time scales.

4
Complex fluids
Faculty students includes
  • A. K. Mishra, P. B. Sunil Kumar, Susy
    Varughese, Abhijit P. Deshpande, Sanoop
    Ramachandran, Snigdha Thakur, K. Jayasree, N. G.
    Praveen, P. Ranjith, K. C. Lakshmi, S.
    Balakrishnan, S. Sriram

5
Activities in Complex Fluids and Collaborating
Institutes
  • Micellar Solutions
  • Nucleation and growth in Liquid Crystal mixtures
    (Uni. Bayreuth - Germany)
  • Elasticity of Cytoskeleton (Helsinki Uni. Of
    Tech. - Finland)
  • Active Colloidal Suspensions (Uni. Barcelona -
    Spain)
  • Statistical Mechanics of Lipid Membranes.
    Electrostatic effects in DNA-Protein interaction
    (Uni. Southern Denmark)
  • Active membranes (RRI - Bangalore, Uni. Memphis -
    USA)

6
Complex Networks
Faculty students include
Neelima Gupte, Zahera Jabeen, Satyam Mukherjee,
Nirmal Thyagu
  • Spatially extended systems, coupled-map lattices
  • Structure, function and optimization of networks
  • Small world networks

7
Networks Structure, function and optimisation
  • The structure and connectivity properties of
    networks have
  • important consequences for their function
    and efficiency. Useful
  • to ask whether these properties can be
    exploited to enhance the
  • performance and efficiency of networks.
  • Question examined in two specific contexts
    the load-bearing
  • properties of a branching hierarchical
    network, and jamming and
  • congestion in a two-dimensional
    communication network.
  • The capacity and performance of these networks
    can be
  • enormously enhanced by the judicious
    manipulation of
  • connectivity properties. Our results have
    relevance in the
  • general context of information spread
    processes on networks.

8
Spatio-temporal Intermittency and Scaling laws in
Coupled-Sine Circle Maps
  • The phase diagram of the system shows parameter
    regimes where the
  • STI lies in the directed percolation class,
    as well as those which show
  • pure spatial intermittency (where the
    temporal behaviour is regular) which
  • do not belong to the DP class.
  • Signatures of DP and non-DP behaviour can be
    seen in the spectrum of
  • eigenvalues of the linear stability matrix
    of the evolution equation,
  • as well as in the multifractal spectrum of
    the eigenvalue distribution.
  • Spectrum in the DP regimes is continuous,
    whereas it shows
  • evidence of level repulsion in the form of
    gaps in the non-DP regime.
  • These results have implications for the manner
    in which correlations build
  • up in extended systems.

9
Mixing and De-mixing Behaviour in
Area-preserving Maps
  • A variety of problems, where the mixing and
    demixing behaviour of
  • chaotic Lagrangian flows has practical
    implications, have been studied
  • in recent years. The transport of impurities
    in flows depends on the flow
  • characteristics, and has practical
    implications in a variety of contexts.
  • Lagrangian flows, and the behaviour of
    impurities suspended in such
  • flows can be studied via area and volume
    preserving maps and flows.
  • We study the mixing and de-mixing properties of
    such systems, analyse
  • their behaviour under parameter
    perturbations, and also set up
  • characterisers for their analysis.

10
Dynamical Systems
Faculty students includes
S. Lakshmibala, A. Lakshminarayan, V.
Balakrishnan, C. Sudheesh, N. Meenakshisundaram,
S. Sree Ranjani, S. Seshadri
  • Randomness and entropy in classical and quantum
    systems ergodicity, mixing, dynamical chaos
  • Recurrences in chaotic dynamics
  • Stochastic processes, random walks and
    applications transport in amorphous media,
    threshold crossing and extreme value statistics
  • Quantum wave packet revival phenomena wave
    packet propagation in nonlinear media geometric
    phases entanglement dynamics
  • Quantum chaos

11
Threshold-crossing statistics in non-stationary
stochastic flows
  • Driven stochastic processes with time-dependent
  • control parameters or time-varying external
    forcings
  • occur very frequently applications (driven
    chemical,
  • biological and atmospheric processes, as well
    as
  • stochastic processes in economics and related
    fields of
  • application).
  • Information regarding a random process is
    usually
  • obtained is via moments. This is of a
    global' character,
  • as it involves averaging over the distribution
    of the
  • variate.

12
  • Much more local probe provided by the statistics
    of the level-crossings of such processes across a
    prescribed threshold, and by related aspects such
    as extreme value statistics and order statistics.
  • The threshold-crossing statistics of stochastic
    flows driven by white noise and by coloured
    noise, and with time-dependent control
    parameters, has been
  • analyzed.
  • G. Nicolis, V.Balakrishnan C. Nicolis, Phys.
    Rev. E 65, 051109(2002)
  • V.Balakrishnan, G. Nicolis C. Nicolis,
    Proc. of. Sci. (2005)
  • Extreme value distributions in chaotic
    dynamics.
  • V. Balakrishnan, G. Nicolis C. Nicolis, J.
    Stat. Phys. 80, 307 (1995)

13
Wavepacket Dynamics, Non-Classical Effects
Entanglement in Single-Mode Propagation Through a
Nonlinear Medium
  • Wavepacket revivals and fractional revivals in
    the propagation of a radiation field through a
    kerr medium signatures of a revival phenomena
    in expectation values and higher moments of
    observables.
  • C. Sudheesh, S. Lakshmibala and V.
    Balakrishnan,
  • Phys. Lett. A, 329, 14 (2004).
  • Effects of departure from coherence of the
    initial wavepacket propagating in a nonlinear
    medium dynamics of a photon added coherent
    states.
  • C . Sudheesh, S. Lakshmibala and V.
    Balakrishnan,
  • Europhys. Lett., 71, 744 (2005)

14
  • Squeezing and higher-order squeezing properties
    of wavepackets propagating in a Kerr medium
    signatures of departure from coherence of the
    initial radiation field.
  • C. Sudheesh, S. Lakshmibala and V.
    Balakrishnan,
  • J. Opt. B Quant. Semiclass. Opt., 7, 5728
    (2005)
  • Entangled two-mode states and entropy of
    entanglement in wavepacket dynamics, analogues of
    revivals and near-revivals and signatures.
    Effects of departure from coherence of an
    electromagnetic field mode interacting with the
    modes of the atoms in a nonlinear medium through
    it propagates.
  • C. Sudheesh, S. Lakshmibala and V.
    Balakrishnan,
  • arXivequant-ph/060320

15
Eigenfunctions of Quantum Chaos
  • Background
  • Quantum Chaos The analysis of quantum systems
    whose classical limit corresponds to a chaotic
    Hamiltonian system. (eg. atoms in strong fields,
    quantum dots, quantum optics, nuclear physics
    etc..)
  • Eigenfunctions of quantum chaos Analytical
    structure little known. Most are ergodic", many
    are localized on classical chaotic orbits,
    scarring". Statistical modelling via Random
    Matrix Theory successful. However no exactly
    solvable simple generic models exist (like the
    left -shift of classical chaos).

16
  • Relavant Highlight
  • Nearly exact expressions for eigenstates of a
    paradigmatic model, the quantum bakers map, are
    found.
  • These eigenstates are found to be dominated by
    Automatic Sequences, such as the Thue-Morse
    sequence. Simplest Model of deterministic
    disorder appears naturally in these quantum
    chaotic states.
  • Eigenstates are generally multifractals, with
    peaks dominated by periodic orbits and their
    homoclinic excursions. Best examples of these
    states named "Thue-Morse states".

17
The Thue-Morse state
  • References
  • N. Meenakshisundaram Arul Lakshminarayan Phys.
    Rev. E. 71 065303(R) (2005),
  • Arul Lakshminarayan J. Phys. A 38 L597-L605
    (2005)

18
Complexity and Quantum Information
  • Background
  • Entanglement has been recently studied to
    characterize complex quantum systems, for example
    at quantum phase transitions. We are studying
    the nature of entanglement across
    integrable-chaotic transitions, using various
    spin models and random matrix theory (RMT).
  • Relevant Highlights
  • If a bipartite system is completely chaotic then
    the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix of
    typical eigenstates or time-evolving states have
    an universal distribution. This implies that the
    entanglement is nearly maximal for such states.
    Thus chaos encourages bipartite entanglement in
    bipartite systems.
  • If subsystems are chaotic and coupling is weak to
    moderate perturbation theories combined with RMT
    describe entanglement production completely.
  • One particle state of nonintegrable spin chains
    have universally distributed concurrence
    distributions. Time-reversal violating states
    share entanglement better.
  • Multipartite entanglement can be enhanced with
    increasing nonitegrability often it seems at the
    expense of bipartite entanglement.

19
Quantum Computation and Information
Faculty students includes
Arvind, Kavita Dorai, Arul Lakshminarayan,
Gurpreet Kaur, S. Begam Elavarasi
  • Ensemble Quantum Computing
  • Quantum Channels
  • NMR Quantum Computing
  • Spin Relaxation in Macro /Bio Molecules
  • Complexity and quantum information
  • Entanglement in spin chains
  • Quantum random walks

20
Interests
  • Quantum cryptography, the physical implementation
    of quantum computers, and quantum channels.
  • Theoretical and experimental investigations of
    ensemble quantum computers (nuclear spins in
    liquid).
  • Study of quantum channels, which play an
    important role in quantum cryptography, in the
    storage and processing of quantum information,
    and help model the effects of decoherence.
  • Linear optical implementations of quantum
    information processors where only optically
    passive (compact canonical transformations) are
    used to implement universal quantum gates.
  • Study of decoherence in quantum systems and
    modeling of environment using master equations
    where we study the evolution of quantum phase
    space distributions for multi-mode systems.

21
  • NMR quantum computing Developing novel pulse
    schemes to experimentally implement quantum
    algorithms, initialisation methods to prepare the
    system in a known quantum state, and readout
    methods based on density matrix reconstruction.
  • Constructed NMR schemes for multiqubit quantum
    gates that implement several unitary transforms
    simultaneously. We have also developed an
    initialisation method based on logical labelling
    of qubits, using selective pulse cascades and
    multiple quantum excitation.
  • More recently, we experimentally implemented the
    Quantum Fourier Transform using selective pulse
    cascades. We found the most efficient
    decomposition to be the product of a
    non-selective Hadamard transformation on all the
    qubits followed by multiqubit gates corresponding
    to square - and higher-roots of controlled-NOT
    gates.

22
Flow structures in lid driven cavity
Sinusoidal lid motion
  • Dynamics of
  • flow
  • mixing

Newtonian fluid
Plate position 2
Plate position 1
Elastic fluid (polymer solution)
Vortical structures of interest
Viscosity 25 cP Frequency 1 s-1
Amplitude 0.05 m
Micellar solution (CTAB)
23
Natural surfactants Saponin from Soapnut tree
(Sapindus mukurossi)
Critical micelle concentration
  • Micellar characterization
  • Applications
  • Environmental remediation
  • Solubilization
  • Personal care
  • Rheology

High concentration
Pouring
Applying
24
Emission Spectra
Thermoreversible gels Poly n-isopropylacrylamide
(PNIPAM)
1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulphonate (ANS)
  • Fluorescence techniques
  • steady state fluorescence spectroscopy
  • life time measurements
  • steady state and transient anisotropy
    measurements

Nile Blue (NB)
25
Phase separation dynamics - mixtures of
isotropic liquid and liquid crystals.Snigdha
Thakur, P B Sunil KumarPramod Pullarkat,
University of Bayreuth - Germany
  • Nematic Liquid Crystal Isotropic Liquid
  • Only miscible in isotropic phase.
  • Focus is on off-symmetric mixture case.
  • Polarization and fluorescence microscopy
  • is used for the studies.

26
Phase separation dynamics - mixture cooled below
the isotropic-nematic transition temperature.
  • Nematic phase nucleate and
  • coalesce.
  • Directed motion of smaller
  • drops towards bigger.
  • Drop velocity depends on
  • cooling rate.
  • Fluorescence microscopy
  • confirms the expulsion of the
  • isotropic component from the
  • nematic liquid crystal.

27
Origin of the attractive interaction
  • Expulsion of the isotropic component makes
    concentration gradient around the nematic drops.
  • Gradient of tension around the drop surface which
    propels the drops.
  • Figure shows the asymmetric drop resulting from
    the impurity concentration dependent surface
    tension.

Other Possible Mechanisms
  • Dipolar interaction? But the drop velocity
    depends on the cooling rate.
  • Hydrodynamic flow ? But dust particle are
    not moving unless pushed
  • by the big drops.
  • Director filed distortions in the drop? But
    the interaction is mediated
  • through an isotropic medium.

28
Active colloids Lattice-Boltzmann(LB) model
Sanoop Ramchandran,P B Sunil Kumar and Ignacio
Pagonabaraga (University of Barcelona)
  • Simulation of self-propelled
  • particles, in two-dimensions.
  • Low Reynolds number
  • motion.
  • Role of hydrodynamic
  • interaction in the onset of
  • collective behavior.

29
  • We use Lattice Boltzmann technique
  • to simulate the fluid (Ladd- 1994)
  • The particle exerts a force on the
  • surrounding fluid in such a way that
  • the total force exerted is zero.

Mover fluid profile
Shaker fluid profile
Model two types of particles Movers (asymmetric
force distribution) and Shakers (symmetric force
distribution).
30
Typical fluid velocity distribution
  • We investigate
  • Changes in Temperature and Viscosity
  • due to particle motion .
  • Fluid mediated interaction between
  • movers and Shakers
  • Collective Motion

31
Strain hardening in a dynamic elastic network a
model for cytoskeleton
P. B. Sunil Kumar Jan Astrom, Mikko Karttunen,
Ilpo Vattulainen, Helsinki University of
Technology - Finland
Electron Micrograph of actin (rods) and other
proteins in cell cytoskeleton (400 nm x 400
nm) Medallia et.al. Science 298 , 1210 (2002)
32
Setup for single cell stretching experiments
Nonlinear response Stiffness as a function of
force
P. Fernadez, P. Pullarkat and A. Ott - Bayreuth
University, Germany- Private communication
33
Side and Top view of cytoskeleton modeled as
random network of elastic beams. The model allows
for geometry change as a function of time.
Nonlinear response of the network.

Differential stiffness For an oscillating
strain of
34
Activities
  • Weekly Complex Systems Seminars.
  • International conference, 12-15 July 2004,
  • ("Perspectives in Nonlinear Dynamics").
  • Active involvement in national conference series
    on Nonlinear Systems and Dynamics
  • On-going collaborations with groups at Univ. of
    Barcelona, Univ. of Southern Denmark, Helsinki
    Univ. of Technology, Univ. Bayreuth, ULB
    Brussels, Hasselt Univ., IIT Kanpur, PRL
    Ahmedabad, JNU New Delhi, IMSc Chennai, RRI
    Bangalore, CMU Pittsburgh, IISc Bangalore, ICTP
    Trieste and others.
  • Publications research papers, reports,
    dissertations, books.

35
Some Relevant Courses Introduced at IIT Madras
  • Dynamical Systems
  • Dynamics of Chemical and Biological Systems
  • Advanced Statistical Physics
  • Advanced Dynamical Systems
  • Simple and Complex Fluids
  • Quantum Computation and Information
  • Rheology of Polymers
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