Emanuele Locatelli
@elocatelli86.bsky.social
30 followers 36 following 6 posts
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Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
bhamlalab.bsky.social
Hiring 4 postdocs — organismal biophysics, soft robotics, frugal Raman diagnostics, or your own bold idea.

3-year funding, $65K+ benefits. GT (Atlanta) now → CU Boulder BioFrontiers Institute in Fall ’26.

PDF/details in next post. Tag/share if someone comes to mind. 🧪🪲🪳#livingphysics
Recruitment poster for the Bhamla Lab. Top shows Georgia Tech and CU Boulder logos. Main headline: “Hiring Multiple Postdoctoral Researchers: Organismal Biomechanics, Soft Robotics, and Raman Diagnostics.” Left column lists four roles—Organismal Biology, Bioinspired Engineering, Raman Diagnostics, and a Curiosity‑Based slot—plus note of 3‑year funding from DARPA, NSF, NIH, and Schmidt. Right side features a vintage collage of a Victorian‑era scientist with robotic arm, insects, and globe, and a circular “Physics of Life” diagram linking biology, physics, engineering, and mathematics. Tan background, Bhamla Lab crest at top.
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
cecamevents.bsky.social
CECAM is thrilled to announce that Prof. Giulia Galli (UChicago) has been awarded the 2025 Berni J. Alder CECAM prize, for her transformative contributions to computational molecular science in the domain of novel methods for large-scale electronic structure & molecular dynamics simulations
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
vsorichetti.bsky.social
How do archaea partition their genome just at the right time before cell division? Check out this new #preprint if you want to know! A great collaboration with Joe and the @buzzbaum.bsky.social lab! 🦠🧬
joeparham19.bsky.social
We are excited to share our preprint describing how Sulfolobus cells coordinate DNA segregation with cell division! In eukaryotes this type of regulation involves checkpoints and CDK-cyclins. But how does this work in archaea? This is the question we ask in our paper: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Temporal and spatial coordination of DNA segregation and cell division in an archaeon.
Cells must coordinate DNA segregation with cytokinesis to ensure that each daughter cell inherits a complete genome. Here, we explore how DNA segregation and division are mechanistically coupled in ar...
www.biorxiv.org
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
bhamlalab.bsky.social
Wonder why flamingos feed upside down? Check out our new work in @pnas.org that demonstrates how flamingos stir, stomp, and chatter to bend flow and trap prey www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
🧵:
Work led by Victor Ortega-Jimenez, with Pankaj and Ben from the Bhamla Lab
PNAS
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) - an authoritative source of high-impact, original research that broadly spans...
www.pnas.org
elocatelli86.bsky.social
We also introduce a "pathway" of configurations, that includes all the relevant orientations between two particles, providing a clean representation of the "important" slice of the potential energy landscape. Super useful!
elocatelli86.bsky.social
We take two models describing particles with an heterogeneous surface charge and showed that they can be matched, yielding a considerable improvement of the more "approximated" of the two models. Importantly, the procedure can be extended beyond the setting we considered (the linear PB regime)
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
danielajkraft.bsky.social
Anisotropic active particles cannot always simply turn to change their orientation after having reached a surface: as we show for active colloidal cubes, this can lead to several populations with different particles speeds. Now out in Langmuir! pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Fabrication and Characterization of Bimetallic Silica-Based and 3D-Printed Active Colloidal Cubes
Simulations on self-propelling active cubes reveal interesting behaviors at both the individual and the collective level, emphasizing the importance of developing experimental analogues that allow testing these theoretical predictions. The majority of experimental realizations of active colloidal cubes rely on light actuation and/or magnetic fields to have a persistent active mechanism and lack material versatility. Here, we propose a system of active bimetallic cubes whose propulsion mechanism is based on a catalytic reaction and study their behavior. We realize such a system from synthetic silica cuboids and 3D-printed microcubes, followed by the deposition of gold and platinum layers on their surface. We characterize the colloids’ dynamics for different thicknesses of the gold layer at low and high hydrogen peroxide concentrations. We show that the thickness of the base gold layer has only a minor effect on the self-propulsion speed and, in addition, induces a gravitational torque during sedimentation. For low activity, this gravitational torque orients the particles such that their velocity director is pointing out of the plane, thus effectively suppressing propulsion. We find that a higher active force can remedy the effects of torque, resulting in all possible particle orientations, including one with the metal cap on the side, which is favorable for in-plane propulsion. Finally, we use 3D printing to compare our results to cubes made from a different material, size, and roundness and demonstrate that the speed scaling with increasing particle size originates from the size-dependent drag. Our experiments extend the fabrication of active cubes to different materials and propulsion mechanisms and highlight that the design of active particles with anisotropic shapes requires consideration of the interplay between shape and activity to achieve favorable sedimentation and efficient in-plane propulsion.
pubs.acs.org
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
physicsmagazine.bsky.social
DNA and other long molecules can become spontaneously entangled with themselves. Simulations have now shown that a molecule comprising two different polymers joined end to end—one inert, the other self-propelling—can accumulate knots more readily than a single-component chain of the same length.
Active Polymers Tie Themselves in Knots
Simulations show that polymers that include inert and self-propelled components are more likely to form and retain knots, with possible applications in materials engineering.
physics.aps.org
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
petrsulc.bsky.social
🧪In our new paper (journals.aps.org/prl/abstract...) in collaboration with Russo, Romano, Rovigatti and Sciortino groups in Rome / Venice, we look at Classical Nucleation Theory: a popular model of nucleation process, n is a key phenomena in self-assembly, self-organization and phase transitions.
Falsifiability Test for Classical Nucleation Theory
Classical nucleation theory (CNT) is built upon the capillarity approximation, i.e., the assumption that the nucleation properties can be inferred from the bulk properties of the melt and the crystal....
journals.aps.org
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
chpoletto.bsky.social
As the COVID-19 pandemic emergency receded, we systematically reviewed modeling practices, data provisioning, and sharing among the modeling teams in the MOOD European consortium

Our pre-print is finally out

www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...

Check out the thread by @esthervk.bsky.social below👇
Goal and methodologies used for modelling studies by MOOD partners during the COVID-19 pandemic Data used, data missing, and data limitations for modelling studies by MOOD partners during the COVID-19 pandemic
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
asciortino.bsky.social
I am very happy to share that my work on active deformations of lipid vesicles is finally out in Nature Physics. A nicer thread+movies coming soon, in the meantime:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

Thx to Andreas, Hammad, Dmitry, Gerhard @laynefrechette.bsky.social and everybody else who contributed!
Reposted by Emanuele Locatelli
vsorichetti.bsky.social
How does protein charge distribution influence the force exerted by biomolecular condensates? We tried to answer this question in our first Bluesky 🦋 #preprint! tinyurl.com/3fzuufy3 1/8
elocatelli86.bsky.social
Thank you! I came here to carry on my long standing lurking activity