69直播

Professor Manz publishes article as part preservation, part celebration

Niklas Manz, associate professor of physics

Niklas Manz, associate professor and department chair of physics at 69直播, recently in Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science, a聽 peer-reviewed publication. The article, 鈥淪cience, serendipity, coincidence, and the Oregonator at the University of Oregon, 1969鈥1974鈥 is the feature piece in the journal鈥檚 Focus Issue and is dedicated to Richard J. Field to celebrate his 80th birthday.

Field, professor emeritus at the University in Montana, along with Robert Mazo, professor emeritus at the University of Oregon, co-authored the piece with Manz. The trio鈥檚 publication serves as a historical review of the development of the Oregonator model of the Belousov鈥揨habotinsky (BZ) reaction, a collection of nonlinear chemical reaction-diffusion systems. Manz explained that physicists use the model to understand and describe spatio-temporal systems with propagating fronts including, for example, stadium waves spectators create, the electrical pulse on the surface of a heart (responsible for the heart beat), expanding animal populations, and also to describe stationary systems with structures frozen in time including patterns of dots, stripes, circles, hexagons, on animal skins, plants, or rocks.

鈥淲e revisited the exciting start of a new field in physical chemistry,鈥 said Manz, explaining that the model, 鈥渂ecame the starting point for describing all these phenomena 50 years ago.鈥

Field is the sole living scientist of the Field-K艖r枚s-Noyes (FKN) mechanism, the first complete reaction scheme to describe the behavior of the BZ reaction. The team also developed a much simplified, mathematical three-variable model to describe the BZ reaction鈥檚 nonlinear behavior, later coined the Oregonator. It was first published in 1972 as five papers in the series named 鈥淥scillations in chemical systems.鈥 Mazo was a theoretical chemist who contributed but was never involved in the publications.

鈥淥ne of my research projects is the 鈥楬istory of the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction鈥 and part of this project is a book with Dick Field as one of the co-authors,鈥 explained Manz. 鈥淭he now published journal article was a book chapter which felt disconnected to the other chapters. I also pursued this path after I learned that Bob Mazo was still alive. I contacted him and asked if he would be interested in traveling 50 years back in time with us.鈥 Manz wrote about meeting with Mazo.

In the early 1970s, Field was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oregon working with Richard (Dick) Noyes and visiting scientist Endre K艖r枚s from Hungary. Following the 1967-68 publications of Ilya Prigogine鈥檚 Brusselator model (a discovery to explain complex chemical behavior that earned Prigogine the Nobel Prize in Chemistry), Field and his colleagues took up the challenge to connect the abstract Brusselator model with a real nonlinear chemical system: the BZ reaction.

Manz鈥檚 science history project on the BZ reaction continues with his book that鈥檚 co-authored by Field and Konstantin Kiprijanov, a science historian at the Technical University in Berlin, Germany.

鈥淚 try to meet as many people as I can to preserve their anecdotes as well as collecting physical and digital documents,鈥 said Manz who has built a online. 鈥淭he book will hopefully include complete publication lists of Boris Belousov and Anatol Zhabotinsky, and also will present newly discovered primary documents about Belousov from various archives in Zurich, Switzerland and Moscow, Russia. I translated the German documents, and the Russian documents are in the process of being translated by Ellen Vayner, adjunct professor of Russian at Wooster.鈥

Posted in Faculty, News on July 26, 2022.


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