[Soft-matter] Soft Matter & Complex Systems Seminar on 17 Apr 2026
Maciej Lisicki
mklisicki at uw.edu.pl
Mon Apr 13 20:46:55 CEST 2026
Dear Soft Matter & Complex Systems Colleagues and Friends,
On Friday 17 April 2026 at 9:30 AM at the UW Faculty of Physics (Pasteura 5, Warsaw; room 1.40) we are hosting a seminar, during which
Emilia Trudnowska (Institute of Oceanology, Polish Academy of Sciences)
will give a talk
Ocean Particles in Motion: Patchiness, Fluxes, and Ecosystem Links from an In Situ Perspective
Abstract
Particles in the ocean—ranging from microscopic to larger aggregates - marine snow are fundamental carriers of carbon, energy, and ecological interactions. I will present an in situ perspective on those aspects and what are the methodologies and technologies used by oceanographers for direct observations of particles in their natural environment. These include laser counters, underwater vision profilers, sediment traps, and autonomous platforms that resolve particle.
My work has been oscillating around explorations how particle dynamics vary across spatial and temporal scales and the processes that shape particles distribution, transformation, and ecological significance across diverse marine environments: Arctic (Svalbard, Greenland, Barents Sea), Antarctic, sub-Antarctic (Beagle Channel), north Atlantic (Gulf Stream, Norwegian Sea), and Pacific (Monterey Bay). The presented examples of key processes governing particles dynamics include: 1) patchiness, 2) models of secondary production based on size structure, 3) particle–plankton co-existance, 4) classification of particles into morphocategories that reflect their origin and transformation pathways, 5) particle flux and sinking rates in relation to carbon export and ecosystem connectivity, 6) mapping approaches that link particle distributions to food availability for higher trophic levels such as fish and seabirds, 7) the effects of glacier melting o particle pools and transformations, 8) resuspension of particles in kelp forest systems, and 9) seasonal variability in shaping particle abundance and composition.
By integrating observational techniques with process-based understanding, this lecture underscores the importance of particles as a unifying framework for studying marine ecosystems, and aims to stimulate new perspectives for discussion and collaboration.
We warmly welcome everyone to attend the talk and the Soft Matter Coffee Break after the seminar, held in room 2.63 (2nd floor).
Maria Ekiel-Jeżewska
Maciej Lisicki
Piotr Szymczak
Panagiotis Theodorakis
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