Lab Home | Phone | Search
Center for Nonlinear Studies  Center for Nonlinear Studies
 Home 
 People 
 Current 
 Affiliates 
 Visitors 
 Students 
 Research 
 ICAM-LANL 
 Publications 
 Conferences 
 Workshops 
 Sponsorship 
 Talks 
 Colloquia 
 Colloquia Archive 
 Seminars 
 Postdoc Seminars Archive 
 Quantum Lunch 
 Quantum Lunch Archive 
 CMS Colloquia 
 Q-Mat Seminars 
 Q-Mat Seminars Archive 
 P/T Colloquia 
 Archive 
 Kac Lectures 
 Kac Fellows 
 Dist. Quant. Lecture 
 Ulam Scholar 
 Colloquia 
 
 Jobs 
 Postdocs 
 CNLS Fellowship Application 
 Students 
 Student Program 
 Visitors 
 Description 
 Past Visitors 
 Services 
 General 
 
 History of CNLS 
 
 Maps, Directions 
 CNLS Office 
 T-Division 
 LANL 
 
Thursday, December 16, 2010
12:30 PM - 2:00 PM
CNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690)

Seminar

How Things Break? – A Failure Story

Eran Bouchbinder
Weizmann Institute

Cracks are the major vehicle for material failure and often exhibit complex dynamics. In spite of the fact that the laws that govern their motion have been intensively investigated for nearly a century, several fundamental issues in dynamic fracture remain poorly understood. A major stumbling block in making progress in this problem is that it involves the coupling between widely separated scales; fast fracture, which is ultimately driven by the release of (linear) elastic energy slowly stored on large scales, is affected by the rapid, non-linear and dissipative dynamics taking place in the very small scales near the front of a moving crack. In this talk, I will describe some of the major challenges in this field and review recent experimental and theoretical advances, highlighting basic properties of the recently developed Weakly Nonlinear Theory of Dynamic Fracture.

Host: Turab Lookman, txl@lanl.gov, 5-0419