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Related Concept Videos

Electrostatic Boundary Conditions01:16

Electrostatic Boundary Conditions

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Consider an external electric field propagating through a homogeneous medium. When the electric field crosses the surface boundary of the medium, it undergoes a discontinuity. The electric field can be resolved into normal and tangential components. The amount by which the field changes at any boundary is given by the difference between the field components above and below the surface boundary.
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An electric field suffers a discontinuity at a surface charge. Similarly, a magnetic field is discontinuous at a surface current. The perpendicular component of a magnetic field is continuous across the interface of two magnetic mediums. In contrast, its parallel component, perpendicular to the current, is discontinuous by the amount equal to the product of the vacuum permeability and the surface current. Like the scalar potential in electrostatics, the vector potential is also continuous...
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Influence of boundary geometry on active patterns.

Jigyasa Watwani1, Sakshi Pahujani1, V Jemseena1

  • 1International Centre for Theoretical Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Survey 151, Shivakote Village, Hesaraghatta Hobli, Bengaluru North 560089, India.

Physical Review. E
|August 1, 2025
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Cellular actomyosin cortex patterns are sensitive to physical parameters and cell shape. Geometry plays a crucial role in controlling these emergent mechanochemical patterns, influencing cellular processes.

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Area of Science:

  • Cell Biology
  • Biophysics
  • Theoretical Biology

Background:

  • The actomyosin cortex, a dynamic network beneath the cell membrane, generates mechanochemical patterns essential for cellular functions.
  • Understanding how these patterns emerge and are regulated is key to comprehending cell mechanics and behavior.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the sensitivity of actomyosin cortex patterns to physical parameters and the geometry of the confining cellular domain.
  • To develop a theoretical framework for analyzing these patterns beyond linear stability regimes.

Main Methods:

  • Development of a hydrodynamic model for the actomyosin cortex.
  • Application of Galerkin analysis on arbitrary two-dimensional domains.
  • Numerical analysis of pattern formation in circular and harmonically deformed domains.

Main Results:

  • Analytical predictions for transitions from isotropic to anisotropic patterns in circular domains based on active stress and turnover rates.
  • Numerical confirmation of secondary bifurcations in pattern formation.
  • Demonstration that domain curvature significantly influences emergent actomyosin patterns, mimicking observations in micropatterned cells.

Conclusions:

  • Actomyosin cortex pattern formation is highly sensitive to both intrinsic physical parameters and extrinsic geometric constraints.
  • Cellular geometry, specifically curvature, is a critical factor in dictating the spatial organization of the actomyosin cortex.
  • The findings highlight the importance of substrate geometry in controlling cellular behavior and provide a model for understanding these phenomena.