PIRSA:11100059

The Tyranny of Scales

APA

Batterman, B. (2011). The Tyranny of Scales. Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. https://pirsa.org/11100059

MLA

Batterman, Bob. The Tyranny of Scales. Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Oct. 26, 2011, https://pirsa.org/11100059

BibTex

          @misc{ scivideos_PIRSA:11100059,
            doi = {10.48660/11100059},
            url = {https://pirsa.org/11100059},
            author = {Batterman, Bob},
            keywords = {},
            language = {en},
            title = {The Tyranny of Scales},
            publisher = {Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics},
            year = {2011},
            month = {oct},
            note = {PIRSA:11100059 see, \url{https://scivideos.org/index.php/pirsa/11100059}}
          }
          

Bob Batterman University of Pittsburgh

Talk numberPIRSA:11100059
Talk Type Conference

Abstract

How can one model the behavior of materials that display radically different, dominant behaviors at different length scales. Although we have good models for material behaviors at small and large scales, it is often hard to relate these scale-based models to one another. Macroscale (effective) models represent the integrated effects of very subtle factors that are practically invisible at the smallest, atomic, scales. For this reason it has been notoriously difficult to model realistic materials with a simple bottom-up-from-the-atoms strategy. The widespread failure of that strategy forced physicists interested in overall macro-behavior of materials toward completely top-down modeling strategies familiar from traditional continuum mechanics. The problem of the ``tyranny of scales'' asks whether we can exploit our rather rich knowledge of intermediate micro- (or meso-) scale behaviors in a manner that would allow us to bridge between these two dominant methodologies. Macroscopic scale behaviors often fall into large common classes of behaviors such as the class of isotropic elastic solids, characterized by two phenomenological parameters---so-called elastic coefficients. Can we employ knowledge of lower scale behaviors to understand this universality---to determine the coefficients and to group the systems into classes exhibiting similar behavior?