
Session S1 - DCMP/DBP/DCOMP Prize Session.
INVITED session, Wednesday afternoon, March 24
517A, Palais des Congres
Ordered states on spheres require a minimum number of topological defects. For the case of crystalline order, triangular lattices must be interrupted by an array of at least 12 five-fold disclination defects, typically sitting at the vertices of an icosahedron. For R>>a, where R is the sphere radius and a the particle spacing, the energy associated with these defects is very large. This energy can be lowered, however, either by buckling, as appears to be the case for large viruses, or by introducing unusual finite length grain boundary scars. The latter have been observed recently for colloidal particles adsorbed onto water droplets in oil.[1] Predictions of topography-induced defect unbinding transitions for hexatics wrapped around a torus or draped over a Gaussian bump will be reviewed as well.
[1] A. R. Bausch, M. J. Bowick, A. Cacciuto, A. D. Dinsmore, M. F. Hsu, D. R. Nelson, M. G. Nikolaides, A. Travesset and D. A. Weitz, Science 299, 1716 (2003)