YoVDO

Physics of Charged Macromolecules - Structure - Lecture 1

Offered By: International Centre for Theoretical Sciences via YouTube

Tags

Physics Courses Statistical Mechanics Courses Electrostatics Courses Polymer Physics Courses Scaling Laws Courses

Course Description

Overview

Save Big on Coursera Plus. 7,000+ courses at $160 off. Limited Time Only!
Explore the fundamental concepts of charged macromolecule structures in this comprehensive lecture by Murugappan Muthukumar, part of the "Soft and Living Matter: From Fundamental Concepts to New Material Design" program. Delve into the physics governing the behavior of charged macromolecules, a crucial topic in soft matter physics with applications ranging from biology to materials science. Learn about the interdisciplinary nature of soft matter physics, drawing from various branches such as dynamical systems, fluid dynamics, and statistical physics. Gain insights into how these principles apply to diverse fields including biology, atmospheric science, engineering, and the food and cosmetics industry. Benefit from the expertise of a global expert in the field and understand the latest developments in this cutting-edge area of research. Ideal for advanced graduate students, postdocs, and researchers working in related areas, this lecture provides a solid foundation for understanding the complex world of charged macromolecules and their structural properties.

Syllabus

Physics of Charged Macromolecules: Structure (Lecture 1) by Murugappan Muthukumar


Taught by

International Centre for Theoretical Sciences

Related Courses

Introduction To Mechanical Micro Machining
Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur via Swayam
Biomaterials - Intro to Biomedical Engineering
Udemy
OpenAI Whisper - Robust Speech Recognition via Large-Scale Weak Supervision
Aleksa Gordić - The AI Epiphany via YouTube
Turbulence as Gibbs Statistics of Vortex Sheets - Alexander Migdal
Institute for Advanced Study via YouTube
City Analytics - Professor Peter Grindrod CBE
Alan Turing Institute via YouTube